ESTABLISHED 18S5
Truman And
Pleven Agree
WASHINGTON, Jan. 31.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN and the French Premier,!
M. Pleven, in a joint statement today said that
the United States and France would never neglect'
any genuine opportunity to settle international
problems by negotiation.
"Discussions between the President and the Prime,
Minister have shown again that no menace or,
manoeuvre will succeed in breaking our fundamen l
tal unity," the statement said.
In Washington, in a 1.500 word communique issued seven
hours after their final meeting ended, the loshdei
they had agreed that aggression must not be rewarded, (N
the menacr nf aggression tipprased.
Ti mo made Uv

...:
plcli* agreement" U to n
i -sistinj* aggression and
assisting free nation-. In Um Phi
East in their afforta to
i.iitv and the assurance
nf their indeper
agreed thai every error:
Hunt be exerted to bring about
an honourable solution
Both countries would support
I aggres-
' ' '
THURSDAY,
V*.'.. i^
PRItF FIVE fENTS
i.oiurs Mki
Lady A 8tor
Protests
LONDON.
America u-born Lady
. -oiufully < rili-
cised claims by Britain's
Socialist Government that
man women than ever. :
employed In industry.
.Speaking at meeting of
Atonal Society for the
lion of Cruelty to
Children. Lady Astor said.
"Where children are con-
cerned I have no politics. I
Um Government arc
boasting about the number
of women in industry.
"It is horrifying that
Woman with children should
be in Industry. If we are
:n a mess why don't the men
work six days a week and
give shorter hours 10
women"
[hi Welfare State
rocking. No Government
has talked more about wel-
fare fo, woman and children.
0 Government has let
them down more.
Ihe former Minister of
Health, Aneurln Bevan, said
ibne would be a revolution
in this country unless more
houses were built.
Well, there nas been no
revolution and there have
been very few houses.
But If the Tories had been
In power for live years and
DO houses were liuilt then
might have been a revolu-
tion and Bevan would have
tried to make it.
"I hop the- British have
not lost their power of pro-
for protesting against
What is wrong made us
great." INS.
!.
Truman pronvsed Pleven that
American aid foe Pranch Union
forces and the national
dhe Associated Stataa of Indo-
china would if continued and
increased quantities of war
material would i" expedited,
hurupe's Import'tnee
WFDniNQ CAKE made for Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walcott by Mi-. Viola De Oason. a replies of the
at lord's when Clyde Walcott scored 168 not out in thj Second We-t Indi,--. England Ttt Match.
Canadian Bridge
Falls Into River
THRU 1.1VERS. Quebec. Jan. 31.
Tii tin o| the Duplessi*
r.ridge crashed Into the St. Law
icnre River early today, carrying
al least two can Into the water
Four of the Injured) people were
rescued by police, but ulhei- wata
to be drowned
dlapai t< re down tele-
phone lines.
Three i*opie were admitted to
hospital. Reut*r.
Progress On
Atom Weapons
WASHINGTON. Jan 31
America repot trd "continued
progms" on uluni weapons today.
It Atomlo Fni'tay Ce.mmis.iOn
1'irallonft for more full
M la awapan lesla continued In
i !!'. i, with the
American armed forces
. art disclosed thnt more
thai 6.000 ship....
Imp^rLnec '^iX.hTo Xej ^S^^JSZISSS? "
Prime M,ni. " f, "' "' m,'"u"al "*** 'hcr
This year' Odu amounted
o more than 40 par cent of the
total of nta made
ince Uta
1*46 They wen being
uaad In 9:w deparunenU of 486
_ Unite. Ituuoni and 175
riiesl Inrtltationi In -'( nations abroad.
The Cosruutaaton reported new
supply aoorcea for atornle orei
lion, additional raclUltaa
at pakridgo and addition
niiim production facilities at
1 Ian ford, Washington State.
An experimental reactor for
testing the feasibility ,.i
new nuclear fuel faster thnn it (
consumed win being completed
at a letting station at Idaho
Reuter
A Drink For Stalin
NOTTINGHAM,
Dr A c Wr-.i. history lecture,
nt Nottingham University, believei
he haa found a way that might
halt the Soviet cold war against
the Western powers.
Wood thinks it would be a good
Idea to send Marshal Stalin ;.
barrel if English ale. He said
use of pea
the world, w
by the prognaalvala i
'
democratic Germany into a
vigorous western i
community.
3. Tn I ed th
hope that the Schuman Plan
Treaty be concluded In
factory form at the
possible nuMimil."
4. Truman BUM) welcomed a
conlerence scheduled for T4b
ruary o in Paris to consider the
formation of a European army
expressing his hope for Its
id accepted the invi-
tation to send an observer and
aid Maxwell Uavid Bruec
would be designated
Atlantli laneThe
i Minister
reaffirmed the r conviction lha:
German participation in the com-
mon defence effort would
strengthen the security of Europe
ithout altering the
character of the North
Atlantic Treaty organisation.
Economic Problemr-The slate
dd the two leaden had
clarified procedural
aaeUtanoa wt '
the most ehTective conti,
the French defence effort

of row material oblems should
be the aim not only of national
n also of in)'
action, undertaken with the
utmost speed and vigour
Thev rtvomiiscd the
ance of dealing wild Inflal
riMim prieaa am
vigorous national and interna
Uonal measures l)e tal
The }'resident and the Prime
Minister said they had
OBJ all questions of COl
tercsts to the r counlrte-
found once again that tl
a hndamental I lentil
between UM
Thai reafflnn I iheli belief
that the principle of ci
security embodkd In the United
Nations Charier was the cWel
o.\ tiii:
SPOT
NEW YORK
A group of Columbia Uni-
versity under fcr.i
have proved th.it you don't
mead a I
tlon to get youi
demcc.
The univer-ity is }uet
Winding up it^ ilist scine-ter
with ;i F0UB of 51
"older" students Who never
received high Khoo) diplo-
mas.
Columbia, for the first
time in its 197-year-old his-
tory, allowed the group to
lust September and
work towards a bachelor of
arts degree.
The average age of the
gioup is 11with a '
pushing 60 and the only
educational pre-req
was an aptitude exam.
University authorities, go-
ing on the theory you're
never loo old to learn, say
they're more than gratified
by ihe results of the experi-
ment. I. N.S.
TWENTY-ONE ESCAPE
THE GALLOWS
FKANKFURT, Jan. 31
AMERICAN AUTHORITIES today freed Alfred Von
Krupp. last owner of tho giant arms firm fron
restored his property. They reprieved from Ihe all< w 21
out of 28 other war eniumaU.
But the real must die, ft wag announced.
The original confiscation orie-- made- against Krupp who is
44, by the Nuremberg WarC' m.s Tribunal which in 1948
>entc'iu-ert him to 12 veais tna; ria inment, was revoked
' He IS to nt|y ;,,(
1
American Mnjli Cuinmifslonei
.i. M
l
1
of ihe
' In Europe
i the olhei ll.
I men are in Landsberg
pen) sev-
eral years not knowing whether
the> would he executed.
M.f|o> s-nd thai
whii ii were final, were ....sc a In
on the United
S M Advlfory Hoard for War
i -
In ihe ca i of Alfred Krupp
Id "Even those guilty
'.d participaUon in the
i* i -I Jidegm. crime* have not i
-
i i an dlgpoaed to lee) that
Ion m thia Ungle case
Imlnation agalntl
d by any
i rum
United Nations Troops
Move Forward I n Korea
tliat the Russian Emperor P*^(bulwarh Of world peace and of
nd hin wife Catherine, pkecl Ihis tho |ndependea:e of free society
ipetfklfauj beverage"
"I wonder if a barrel of ale
delivered at the Kremlin", aaid
Wood, "might not do something
to assuage the cold war**, -INS
.. the
Full Scale Alliances
Paul BanJdne n
m en pace 5
(II \Kl.fS ( HRAN
fHI\riSS I I l/AIH I II AMI l-AMII/.
Cochran Dies At 79
LONDON, Jan. SI.
Itritain's greatest showman. Sir
: O chran, died hera lo-
79 after he was severely
scalded in his bath last week.
tie. launched hundreds
of Ktars through his ions < arear
noted every type of en-
Ung, hnx-
Ulng and
'hows became

elected by hirn peraoa
ehorui
In IH2I he became bankrupt.
Mo recovered, succeede I
'34.
a he waa 74
ge with the mu- U
"Bleu ihe Brtde" and
II in 1048.
:
the IheV
Cochran beoaaw Chevajler 11
h Ix-gion of Honour in
i960 for i n Introduc-
ing French art to the English
stage.
i roducrd 110 plays and
I publica-
. -.! Tiie Se, ..
Hi Umost For-
gotten,'' '
1
Kruler
" -7,
^
A NEW PICTURE released from CUrence Houe of Pnnccis Ell-
beta, Prince PbiUp and their two children Prlnc- Cliri' and Prlncen
Anne. Prtncens Elizabeth, recently relumed from Malta, plans to
return there after the Mediterranean Fleet, in which her htuband com-
toandk the 1.430 ton frigate Magpie, flnlahe Its Spring cruise at the
and of March. rarprris,
U.S. Imluslry
Reaches Peak
WA J a. 31.
I

The F" Beard
I ir ateo ; a .put from
iched the
' teak this moMI
June. 1945.
The olTiclal index was
I above the 10SI
;;e and refleeled a p.,',
tenth mi ik of ihe
iwr las": June
, The high-'st Uidex a
Oc!o"3er and November. 1043.
1 neuter.
Ii. publituns \\ ill
Try To Bovroii
Red Countries
WASHINGTON, Jan 31
The Republicans In the United
States House of Representative*.
ittad they wdl try to beT
Russia, Communist Chin;t and
other iron curtain countries" from
benefits and tariff cut* the United
Stales may make as a result M
agreemanta with free nation1
At u party meeting they agreed
it ix, that
hue when the House votes to-
morrow on 'he Bill to extend the
Reciprocal Trade Law for three
more years.
In practice, cutting the duly on
imports from one nation means
a cut in duty on similar IraportS
from all countries. This is be-
cause America has so-called
"most favoured nation" under-
standings with most of the world.
that I a promise thai no othei
netJCTI will be favoured over Ihe
country with which An i
such an undertaking. Rcpub-
want lo rule i\m\ that
Rrr H iron curtBin
countries are concerned. Reuler,
Dewey Wauls
Ail Alliance
WITf SP4/fV
ALBANY. New Vc rk, Jan. SI.
QoVOmor Thomas Hi wev i idi
Cited that he vowed aliun
peech here last night.
I (; vernor said: Wi i
country HI in danger I waul
iln, 1 will
t.ike Tito. I will take Turks, and
I will take Chiang Ka! Sh
*tood with us during the Iaa1
The twice defeated 1:
tlal candidate
1 "should
not withdraw Into our cowardly
Shell." Renter
the
Mac Arthur
Confident
LAKE SUCCESS. Jan. II.
' '
was wtthln the capabilities of his
continue \
gering losses" upon Chi i
I etet in Korea Tht
'.linement was made in i
repon

1
dons Command for tin
Occemter 1 to Januar-.
.Is.?. -eter.
I'r.iprrl} ( onlls
'. n of nro-
pcrty is not .. tual. leanant In oui
ludiei.d system and i* assaarally
repucnant in American concepts
of justice."
Ided, however?, iii.it the
property ol tha Krupp concern will
tve subjeet to the Allied lli.'.n
1 "ii l)eearte|iM,...,n I.,..
1 "" ......ganlaatlon of Oi
d. iron and steel Industrie
The High Commission>
rnetTl added: "Where
hate been substantially reduced,
MtO the result more of de-
-ponsibihtY and Othei
extonuaUng i In umi lances brought
tut mainly since ihe trials.
1
alletuni IS wai crimuials iimtta
11 (urlsdli lion
in ii 11 death seiit.i.i i la i f.
unprlsorunent and upheld two
i tenets
rat Sehai-
uard at Muehldorl Con-
iitratum (amp. near Dachau,
bo asctracti i fold taeth rrom tha
had died
r.om heatings he personally ad-
'l. and Hans S.Jm.nil.
Adjutant at Burhenwald i
iraUon Camp (or three years.
During Schmidt
mm) prisoners dud tech month be-
cause of camp conditions and
ueltles inflicted on them by the
- Rruler
Nevada Atom
Tests Will
Be Secret
WA.MliN, rON, J.tii 31
Oordon Dew
-non said
hera thai all Inl etn it
tha Navad tone will
be withhi l,i to Slop Ruaaiem*
finding out aboir.
Dean used the U i",
bosabN in uiening to the blast:
two of which were set off la*
but late, ta .
ICUy what he n
"They are .ssennalu
mental nuclear deton.a
told a news eonferenre adding
thai this deacrlpUoi aa curnbeav
some but necessary to give the
correct idea.
IHera has been speculation that
l.i blasts are small scale
atomic aicploalons whkh mas
ilnd mill' in m such
weapons as rdded missiles.
Dean said U O
would not ccimii.eiit on any such
speculation.
Neither would ft announce
future explosions in advance DM
tell anvthinic about them after
warda the Chairman sau
We do not want Russian ob-
l lllclal or unontclol, ot|
And we do nol w.ot
Dte nature ^i v e leati or th
ucce or lack of i act bm known
to tin- Russians.'"Reuter
TOKYO, Jan. 31.
UNITED NATIONS forces intensified their ad
vance along the central and western fronts at
dawn today. Troops sweeping forward on the cen-
tral front had so far met no resistance.
Vicious hand to hand fighting and artillery duels
kept the advance along the 40 mile western front
at a steady rate as troops struck tho main Commu
His' lines of resistance north of Suwon.
Canada
Asks For
Workers
Korea Off V.N.
Council Agenda
i,akk SUCCESS, Jan II
The Security Council iiti.ui
imousiy decided todaj to >'t
the K' Ironi
agenda.
llrllain proposed the delet
Tha Soviet Union q u I c k 1 j
agreed and all eleven men
held up their hands when
h i called for tha
Quevedo ol tt Ltetl
i i am i:'
ul- that lti lu*;
mimity."
Britain took this action brraiise
the Ceneral AsM'ndd. ,,,,,
racornrnendauot
quaatlon being deali with i>v n
Security COUnell. The deletioi
if the Korean quaatlon born
Councll'a agenda would allow lha
A amblj to retltV tin R
p.* << h\ I I'lditti :il (' mniiittee
i inmuilis'.
China as aiutrcs&or.
sn Oladwyn Jabb, Britain
told the Council it might in
argued that the Council In feel
I'ait not.......i ( Its fune-
in respect to the k roan
htaua because of lha Sovlel veto
The forma] removal of tin- iteir
from tin- agenda would n mi 11
techm
Oladwyn added that the thin
action m BrltaJn'a view would nol
Invalidate in any wa> i Hot
already token on Korea by tin
Council, nor WOUM M prevent tio
Council rrom taking up the mattei
igaln it H dsa lde| lo do a bg
imiiie proi adursl \ ola
Si'iiivon Thampkun of t h.
Sc.viet t' ii i on i. i'. i

iv been put or
the council's agenda In an Illegal
lb- woulc
vote therefore in faVOUl M lit
diletiMii After a unaniinout
I mad artlh
out flxinn a data :or it* m
InnReutrr
India Iti-fust's Soul
On U.N- Committee
Indi-
NBW DSLHI, Jan 31.
would not accept a seal
t. tha Good ODloea Comrolttaa
Nntions'
solution brandlR
i,
today
Reports- from Hi |
ia|d that the Gesienl
rullah Enl
axiom thai tndl
Su Isenegal Rau should norvi tn
.i
Authoritative Indian quarters in
New Delhi deecrlbed lha I
hi favour of tha
'i as an
"unfortun i i impalrltia
negntlated Battle-
ment of tha Kon
> ' rn problems. India a t-'-i
ngainn the resolution.Rruler.
Eight Kitted in
Belfast
I'.KI.KAST. Jgn, 31.
Al aaal end,! men were k I ad
I mgway leading Iron
whaling factory ship
Ju4ii I'rron .oil.,p.,i sjad hurlc
them on to the
ihe w.dei here today.
were crowdh.
ashore at the end of the m ,,
work when Ihe
huiling thorn 50 ie t to the dock
-id Othei n ii v to the wata
ught lx.die-- .., Utter rccoverei
; nd 20 men wen- taken to iMSpttal
Ja*n I'eron. 32.000 tons. Is |h(
. hale factory ship in th
world She was drawn up to thi
Belfast shipyards.
It i thai more met
were killed The ship was launchc<
have bev
I I'ompania Ann
i dc I'' Bueno Aires.
-Reuter
EARTHQUAKE SHAKES
THREE CITIES
LONDON Jan 31.
Earth felt ll
i i i:iv today*: Egypt,
Pakistan gad Israel.
tumbled out of their
-s rattled and
' d but no dam-

N
ents In these
nshed into the
The flrsi was
felt Just alter nudoight. Otheis
exonger aeeh time, came il kail
ivals.
r iaga was rep
ofllclals dcocrHj .irtht|u;iki
as very mild".
Tel-Aviv Peopl.- who
kera thought the city
was being bomt-
fa |

pa was
described a* alight". Reuter.
mensni
LONDON Jan. 31.
Canada to-rnoi roe I Iw
starts an .ill out drive to attra-
workera Ie her
radlliatlng thia
*aasage Bcherne whereby
' '111 will
I
easting to rnlgreta to Canada.
Loans to the value 0.
mately 60 (equivalent to 180
Canadian dollar.- I will l..- u .:.
in the form of a warrant'to a
recognized tranaportaUon com-
pany to cova pa sage and

PACK TWO
BARBADOS ADVOCATE
THURSDAY, I I ItlEI ARK
Ccudb Calling
CiLYDE WALCOTT. ffM
and Spartan wicket-keeper
batam,in. son of Mr.
Prank Walcot*. il "C\
Black Rook was yesterday
married < *-i Church
, Aahter. cldost
daughter ol Mr, md Mrt Vaga
Akhjbv of 'Plumgrovc" Christ
Church.
The bride prveanted beautiful
picture in a dre*s ol while
embroidered or*anza with a yoke
of illusion net. Tln> Hi
three-flounced skin that ended in
n train
Her head-dress waa Juliet cap
ct seed pearls and BM WON I
fingertip veil of illusion net
She cniried a bouquet of wh'U"
roses uaith orchid* ll.taHwInail
with seed pearls.
Tin MHaM Barbara Ashhv and
Ml I
lH-atitilul attendant* of the bride.
They wore dresses of jonquil
yellow and blush lavender organza
tcspectivcly. They carried bou-
oueta of violets and orchids, and
tiaras of flowers adorned their
hlr.
Mr Keith Waleott. Lntarcoaonial
cricketer .md footballer, brother
of the bridegroom was bestman.
Messrs. Iterr- Odle. Cliflord Skln-
ntr. Frank and Cecil Clarke were
the ushers.
The Reverend Hugh Payne
cfflcialed.
The bridegroom's cake was one
of the DMM original fern in years.
It was made to represent tho.
Criekc. Held at Lord's where Clyde
Wdlcctt muac 168 not out in the
Second England-West Indies Test
at Lord'* last year.
The bride's cake was in the
shape of two hearts pierced by n
Cupid's bow.
These wire the creation of Miss
V. Oe Cazon who won the first
DfffM ui the Icing Division with
ihe Ingenious copy of a hat .it last
year's Agricultural Industrial
Exhibition.
The honeymoon is being spent
at Bath.'heha Mr. and Mrs
Waleott leave for England next
month
Hunting Patterns
H if EMBERS of the Barbado*
Dramatic Club playing in
"A- Uuxuar Has Been Arranged,"
*o be staged 11 the F.mplre
Theatre towards the middle of
next month are busy hunting for
jjatterns ol the dresses of notable
people in past history, such a
Mary Queen of Scots. Henry ,f
Navarre, and Kuthertne of Russia
The play, although modem and AMH- and Mrs IrvUfl K _
In modern costume for the most ITl. arrived on tin I < ** of Mr. Ross McKenzic, T.C.A.,
l>art. gives a flash back to the yesterday from Can-i<
fabulous den of (Jueen Elizabelh ".wo weeks* holiday they are stav- and their two daughters Heather
ami the Italian Nobility. ,n, at u,,. Hatting! I! Ml -1"1 Gal> arrived Iron Canada
It s a long time since a costume n,v,B .* , t C A nilot Their yesterday by T.C.A. They will stav
play has been performed locally hn_1 .
and I understand every detail is
being studied even down to the
ctrrect wigs.
Women
Don't Give
A Hang
LONDON
British males complained today
thiit British women were becoming
"ruder, more sarcastic and more
aggressive than ever before."
Tli.- mild-mannered, slow-mov-
ing Englishman. who likes to
think he is lord of the manor, Is
Judy Garland's
Story
By Judy Garland
As Told To Michael Drury
AQI'ATIcrLVH CINEMA (M.mb.n Only]
:i MKI1IIT"
Because of my photoaraphK Mil
I
abed
Taylor '
_ memory. I was known oils* lol mlo a ""'" y"".?1^^',^
eltin* hu dander up o.. H...on.-lk.|lrt-twom.mo. hertier,and put on an """fZ
.liocklni" behaviour ol Brllami Nobodv dirtrltd me very much; I robe, and Ihen talked lo torn lot
wiman.in.tlw.nrMt. just went out there and did what two nour. jrf.ki. ; K,r
He Is gulck lo admit that years came naturally. I T^L^T- "^""IJS !
ol oueuein.. aunerlty and nrui- rd- ''"?"* 7I ^J"' -
linn to make ends meet I. enoulh So I hadn-t reckoned on Vincente own profession l P
la make an, woman mad on Minnelli We had met before, haps, than from a hj
ff JHVE cbrU,wc5kedT^Mh1mh'm" * ">, S^-HS^
VZ&rVdt&C- K. me do tha, .* seen. SW K UTteKTj. 1.
WomVwere ruie "d r^e J. "a*"* " """" "-*
enough before the meat ration
but now thw.... u> drtih. fi52SvjTE\irraa m". rr s" .is? arir'JS
in.
times 1 couldn't believe ihy Some months later I heard
& rro^eU'Vh-cn1? Jft JTS "Se"^.." *5L.
'" ir^i^e^,:0dre.Shul,h.d'dh.T --5iji^ir^
"^1 me into his office and tolo
Mervyn Leroy was going to
The Wizard of O*" and
I cried all ever my make-up. wanted me U> play Dorothy.
and she almost had to push mo n wa* my first big break. I got
back on that set. But then on a peC,al Academy Award for that
thje first try, it went off smootn nimi anu i wheeled my mother
as cream. into letting me wear long w,''c
gloves to the reception, and a lltt
PLAIi\ ThralreBridgetown (DiAl 2310)
lMY WILD IRISH ROSE"
- ! 1 P
iiuTV- Dob nassHi ft
BTHAann unrojr
riUDAV III t*.M. lOttlii
(t TI1F M \|.|l--t
\; ITnM Dm .. -i'1
COVIS IO t.i -I' 11 I
Suddenly 1 knew whV hc^had gg^Jgj,'^ ,ll have I
.il .lorn. 1 s.w th.tLf 'wr
;er oln, to be_y * "'' ',rw.
i.i
anted
_ They .d w | , of myM_and^uc f ^^ ..^^ ^ ^m%..^ gc, m
liatever character I
white and t*iul-
MR. AND MRS. CLYDE WALCOTT
T.C.A. Pilot
ind Mn
Family Reunion
IIS JOYCE McKENZlE. w
Sew skt^^ss ^^^"mXrp'icrre^ tzr^
*tiT2A*t ES one: N lost U my U.ent. me Mervy,
cut they want. I just can't ym-
pathiie with them any more."
Department store detective
Ralph Curry is thankful his shop':.
January tales are over.
Never have I seen such dis-
graceful scenes," hje claimed.
"Why the women went wild.
punhing. shoving; grabbing and at ]
times what language! Th
matched hats out of each olhe. ^naievr ti
hands, held Uigs-of war over .aving. 'o"' dro**
tan and i BsmrajtaiJ inorc Utw vine*) > dnvt tte wiww eaat rant
a lew squabbling PO-called lacile-,". 1(l in ,h(. erul I was more please. Other girls *ettiir W ^
Salaarnan Edwanl Foole charged uilh -Meet Me In St. Louis' ning dress 'or proms. "' m^.
that men couldn't walk Use streets lhan with anything else I had so I'd look right when I put :m>
rf London anymore without ,iMV up till that time feet in the wet cement at c.rju-
"bems assaulted by umbre)|. ,. mans Chinese Theatre
high heels shopping bags or big I was to receive still anotnei people more astute than I hate
parcels * lpMon )n QeUnf lW)> or lhreP vpars ^ JJ undcrsland th.
"Women don't seem to give a ;jtar that when 1 went to see aftlp between movie rtars a
hang trapse day- They just charge The Glass Menagerie on Brow- An actress not only holds a cer-
along without looking what they way. To be WTO I'dJy+jgf* Um ,ob but in a sense |h
are doing or where they are going, I wrote ahead for them oeiore i Job; |h(f ftnB Hke h^r ,
And the best you get alter being left the coast. ____ her :obi lf ,hal In9kes sense.
crtcke.1 over the shins with an When I got to Njy T* y\\ never forget the first time 1
umbrella is a sharp 'sorry' Most picked up the tickets.m the uoj mob of ^
women don't say a word but jus rfflee 1 ttle note '^"^""^ Mickey ind I wont to New York
look daggers a. you a. if ,t is all T*>ior P^ *J. *: for Uie opcnlni[ of an a^. n...d,
^i^clor Rupert Kent: "l-adies ^V^'to^ed and m
jreul ladiea any more except. It prised, because wed never
EiJ'm^SSS" SHS '''t'^^'r-S actor, buck ^K^J3
women can be delightfully charm- stage Is unaatJsfactory. They re focal point
mgand become rude, saucy, ill- tired and h igrv. "
tempered females". l.N.d.
PLAZA TheatreOISTIN {DIAL 8404)
.ith too i
B.B.C. Radio Programme
Montreal
Cuatoms Official
for a few days at an hotel before
moving into their new home,
Atlantic View", Enterprise Boiil,
Chrht Church.
Le Misanthrope
^HE montlily meeting of 1*-
Circle Prancaise will tako
ni bad<
ARRIVING from Cmada yes-
terday on Ihe T.C.A. Spe. lal
Flight was Mr. Frank J QullW
who Is Chief Appraiser o( custom*
in Hamilton. Ontario. He is here
Firtt VUit
MBS. SOPER it South Hull
PQ was met at Seawell
place at the British Council
quarters. Wakefiold. at 8 IS lor about six weeks and U a guest day .b "" In*n*,t^'
tonight K i. propoaed to read at the Hotel Roval. }*v* *h" "l8 ^nd,"B a
Le HlaanUu-ovV. PU%y i.v holiday In Barbado.. Mrs Soper
Moliere, and those having copies Not Even Carnival i- down for a month and is staying
asked to bring them along. m "c (-7nr ?. ?, I,1 < ""' Mur1^ ? She came
a*;i5S CAROL MAl.H who , 1)n )hr T C A Special flight
. was in Barbados In Decem- This is her llrst iit to Barbados.
tmasDAv. rtMiAiv i imi
s.js< t.m. IS.M N.
1 in Th, N.. T in N.W.
Vnsiyili. T IJ in From tin- Enitoiuia.
t M l Progximm* i'arsii-. T.ss
> m (li..rall. Sswaklitg. 1 45 a
tu.lrf.er*- Choice, t am. Ijii.a and
i"ro.k. so a m Bdwaid i r.r^ir,
I.U
t .m Th Nw S10 am Hour- .Saw.
/'
..p Praitiinmf Parad. 1130 m
Uatmara- Chot**. 1145 am. Spatial
DiaMich, II .
Analfila. It 1% t>
IK pin ljhi Orchi-Mial Muu
(4S p m. Proti tiT-iin* Parada. 1 p"
Tr.a Nawa, T.W pjn Nawa Analyal
1 i p m. Wa
With the best
there's a tioru. "in the woi 14
any people. But cou|d kill you.
One of the most amazing thing*
about all the trouble I've hi
lately is that people no
want to paw me. People I ce
tho street, total strangers, look at
me dirTarentl>as though the
realise almost with .uu. tMHWM
that 1, too. have feaUnfl
(To-morro: Judy's marrlagra:
she start* psychoanalylieal treat-
ments in effort l he better iie
and ni-'tin. -.
I.AIETY[THE GARDEN) ST. JAMES
utrrc sm
LAKCENV WC
VMM,-; PCM i hi l u.l t -
KOStrANNA MeCOV
MARSHAL OF MF.SA CtTV
n\ in, in 1DUKI
,'.;'.',.','.',',',*,*
GLOBE

1<> I1AV 4 30 a. 8.S0 LAST SHOWING
WfaIMt.Xii I/.OA///7. "
whom: srniAL
OPLNINO FKHtAY !nd I *. 8 30
last* OAKLAND A Oene KELLY
h, SVMMEM STOCK
Plas) LOCAL TALLNT at 8 30
Cloaa Dm. ii
I understand that the laat
Ing of the Circle was
M,:
success, though a few of the mem-
2? b>
..is use iiju ii. a u.u ht.
' 11 m Radio Nevl. IU nit,
Sit John Mar(iH'a l-i" Jiutmr
8 t-1 p.m. CompoMr or lha Waak.
t p m. Spacial Dtapntch, S.ll p m
Ha.a a On. 44 p m Do Your PUmt-mbai.
lb p.m. Tha N. ISIS p m. from "
Stlltonal*, 10 IS pm Taka II liom II.n-
IC4I pm Mora- McClaran Talkinl
II pm The Mum of Sid Phillip* and
l.ia Band
fin
hoi Ida v,
bers were found furtivelv
versing in English.
En Route to England
AFTER spending
Canadian Solicitor
JAMES M FORGIE. o
Solicitor of Pembroke,
arrived from Canada
JifLi' ffiHl ^SS*1 niKl1! v^>f"-y I'V T.C.A. to spend two
MRS.
ho
" couldn't resist the opportunity of
roining down again tvn the
knowlclge ol Carnival In Trim- \4"
dad eculdll'l tempt In i t.. ny-pu.*s 1V1 S^..
BarUidi l SI i terttav Ontario
M T.C.A. "--'-
weeks' She
. holiday in Grenada with their staving
uncle Mr. George Joseph, a mer- Carol works with T C.A.
chant of St. Georges, the Misjes Montreal.
ray and Peggy Joaaph raturad to m *> ,
EngUuui on Monday evening by FOf Carnival
(he Fremh u Colomble
They Hew over lo Barbados \f"- -'"'I Mrs. Julian At\
from Grenada bj IIWIA, i loin iT* and Ihei
the boat and during .heir short for Trinidad o. ..
visit, were staying at the Hota* by B.W.I.A. to spend C| ,"'re 'or a month's holiday,
Royal. In Trinidad. staying nt the Abbeville Guest
- Mr. At well is with Dear's House, then she plans to visit
Summer Retort Garage here Grenada and Tobago,
_ ,. Mis. Snyder was in Barbados
fcflU II. BEVERLEY ROBINSON To Study Law In March last year.
1TJ. who lives nt St. Andrews-by- ..
the-Sea. a summer resort in New A RRIVINC in Barbados on T.V. Dancer
Brunswick arrived by the T.C.A. -* asbslday .veii.nu BJ tha TN Kaleidoscope' last week
Speci.ii from Canuda yesterday. Colomble from Pi I .n-viirt fai England
Bond and Stock Broker, E. BiasMiigU.n ... .he s r. \: i > >d sjiw tor the thud lime Wcsl Imli.-i
Rupert and the Sketch Book-24
Mi
companled by his wife and they
| lag at Sam Lord's.
Wub Herr Laat Year
1HS. CI-1VK SNYHKII whose
home is in Kitchener. Ontario
lOchaai I.I. "''"I *'" Canada by the
,. T.C A. Special yesterday. She
Pr.u." on in ihe diriction thi:
Roul'.c hit gont. Rupcir rrschti
inothct aide road. "Now I don't
know which w*r lo go." he mur-
nun. Then ht brighltni a he
.pin i till figurr in the nJ< load.
,rThn'i anolher Dolictmin." he
'.-. *> would never go near
a alter what hu happened. She
muu hive kept airaight on." And
i" spue of iae ram he runs ahead.
Tt road bend, and gradual! (he
hoUMt get feaer and tht tow:i
(oim IO an end. Thia il awfV.
! -v- k tomaone te help." he
thinka.
He
and is here for u month's holiday, the Caribbean Commlssmon, She ll dancer Boscoe Hold.
It s pretty cold In Canada now and now on her way i i f., ;.,t Deenniui Wnlter-EIlis. doing their
he prefers the summer resort .if Kingdom where aha hopag in usual sketch "These are tha
the Weet Indies. study law, dan "
BY THE WAY
.
Ijp Hoarhviimlur
YOU'VE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE IT ON THE
SCREEN BEFORE . IT'S FASTER THAN SOUND!
IT'S GOT I \ I K V I HIM. : THRILLH . ADVENTI'RE . ROMANCE
ih'i.mm. io-\nmnm\ ,l,i,I.,,,,
J..IO ami II..IO p.m.
HfS A TtST laf MJeTHJMX mm A ass*--
any the
Dm
TIE President of th<
Society, of which
founder member (In
around Boot through the Influ-
ence of an aunt who Invented fly-
paper overcoats for cows), h;
complained that science has in-
vented so many queer languages Novcr jd ^ WMU
can no lunger
Lindartftand one onother.
; or tin
Tuvniv Ywir* of I /mmi
' A VOICE
Hnrt/s of I*.'khifurl
A SCIENTIST,
TP^attffTlg^
Royal bod) i
belter.
wishing to ro-
an anxious world,
uttficd (without a smile) this
it powai monumental sentence: "The
Uatcal crlUc. scale of ntomic atljick necessary
A very to destroy the whole surface of
loud voice." It la said that, when the globe Is much larger than
singing Falcnn.i in "Uinaldo." people realise."
Good! Thii will add lo the Ruiliguz/i blew a unull child out
gaiety of nations, and encourage ol the front row of ihe stalb .is #1 / ussi/lar
the lighter-hearted among them easily as you or I would blow out m^^m .......
to babble without resiraint. At I candle And Angvlique -T^HF report published by the
the Wanscote Experimental Stu- Adinoide. taking tha part of Mor- Colonial Office the other day .\lso the Short: "SO YOU WANT TO BE IN PICTURES"
turn Ui.v tell the story of a gana In the same opera, uttered dealing with the Island of St.
professor who said mulvlcules. a shout ("a cry." say* the muatcal Helena recalled In mv mind a
when he meant bulvicules The critic) which wh^ked Hie bow eWlOUl fact. When Napoleon
inlarpreter translated the wrong out of Ihe hand ol the llrst fiddle was a schoolboy he kept note-
word, and a Portuguese colleague ("violin" says the mmic.il critic), book in which he Jotted dowe
found he had made a strong solu- and made the conductor's whif- points from his studies. There
Uon of oxohvdrodimetholvxtrol ker.s tremble like those of the w< an entry in the section de-
in^lead of chlorophosphocortobiio- old sailor at Weymouth when the voted to geography. Slv Jivlene,
lene As al' four words were impudent little boys' ask him lo priUe He . Those four words.
invented by I^ilp o! I^lpiig. no- say "flfty-flvc." BM no more.
RAYWDaO MASSEY IHCVAW WHOKF gnjMR hEiSlH
Plus Latest "WORLD NEWS"
(Presented h> Ws.-ner Pathe News)
#*#-1 ikf 1 #Yf e-'f-f ##'# BRIDGETOWSDial2310
Wise Buys
BARGAINS today.
Prices will rise.
So don't delay
Flowered CRETONNE
at EVANS & WH.TFIELDS
DIAL 4606 DIAL 4220
LINENS dept. lines
Yd
27' Print CRF.TONNE 64(1
36' CHEESE CLOTH 42*
56'STRIPF. TICK 1.19
F30\1['.STIC 381 & iSt
l>illow 2"
Pillow-cases-
94? f. 97*
ACT QUICKLY!!
THEY'RE
MOVING FAST!!
A Small Shipment of
AGRICULTURAL FORKS
O.M.Y $4.70 EACal
THE BARBADOS CO-OPI IIA I ivi:
Mil BO\ I Al TORI LTD.
Has-dsrarr and lrwai,ni'r< Drp.rtm.nt T.lrphonr No !39
CROSSWORD .
Ii H j 'A 1 E | |i
I
5 >6
F *t w
J ^- -.

TIUKSDAY, FKMtl-ARY I. IMI
BARBADOS ADVOCATE
PAGE THREE
Count Those
3 Bills With
"Electric Eye"
B ROBERT ( I.AltK
Washington
An economy-minded Tttuuiv
ha* come up with new i ,
labour-savin*, devicesa machine
io count old dollar'bills.
Secretary Snyder has announced
The development of ;in Electric
Eye" counter to thumb Uiroueti
the five million torn and tattered
paper dollars that hare to bo
retired daily.
The Treasury will install 25 cr
*ne machines to replace- .,-
annual savins of (230.00080 am-
ployres who now do the lob by
hand.
The machines each count moro
'.nan 500 dollars a minute, eight
nines as (M as the average em-
ployee. And they don't mind the
smc'l. either.
The Electric Eyes will take over
inc job of checking the silver
*T(iimit,.s that come into the
Treasury for redemption alter
banks decide they've outlived their
usefulness. Federal Reserve Bonks
hind Km old bills in bundles of
100 and cut them in hair, but the
Treasury rechecks the count lust
to make sure.
The new machines, developed by
the Buremi of Standards, reject
packages that don't contain exact-
ly 100 bills after count inn them by
means of a light beam that actuates
;i photo-electric system.
New money has been machine-
counted for years, but until now
no mechanical device had been
able to keep an accurate count of
bills that were wrinkled and doa-
fired
The ..veraae life of dollar Is
about nine monthsand with more
than a billion in circulation just
replacing the old ones Is a big
Job.
Lost year alone. 1.138.588,540
dollar bills were sent in for re-
demption nearly 25 million !
pounds Id nil
Coins, formiiutt.lv. have a much . g~% >
longer life span. The average life tlOW IjOVemillCnl \1 fil |1 [ I' -II III
of the nearly one and a half biUlon - ._,.. a *WVU** J III
dnllnrq worth ,\1 enin of all rvne*. THE HAGUE. Jan 29.
ofwmW S bv tte iuW c te Dr D" s,lt,ker- foreign Minis- A mobile exhibit is showing the
tn SO vJiiS ler I* ,he Dutch Coalition Cabinet latest developments In faun and
* which resigned last week, v.a home research to farmers of a
Total currency and coins in cir- to-day sounding party leaders large agricultural area in the l'm-
culalion. in case you would like to seeking to form a new Govern- ted States. The -Family Fanning*
know whether you've got your nient. ... exhibit, as it is called, is being
share, is about 27 billion dollars Wusen Juliana asked nun displayed in 3B counties (districts)
$180 for every man, woman and *horUy ?for? m'dn'*hV.,aBt night Ui the State of South Dakota,
child in the country ,0 "ivestieate the possibilities o,
I.N.8. 'on"'n* n*w Cabinet" though The display shows 1) important
this was not a mandate to form phases of farm and farm-home
., rt ,,^i.-, fin tcd st,kkor wouW be able to of Sioux Falls, in the State of
U.S. IINGOME UP .r^^lTTo =-^ 8^ "".^ repor,s *
Stikker May Form Farmers gco MOTHPROOF
dav
iwo lhat he could form a works- ciud~;. ,,, imp,^,,,, propcl
WASHINGTON. ""Li""Sif________, ,, ,. feeding of chicken., produrlmi.
The sovcrnnunt has reported "'IST?, " f < ""'" m,lk- "n" '"""S'ap.n,
lhal U.S. national Income hit on il! iffi r>TaK and lmP">lnS Ihe larm home.
alMlmc quarterly hih In the Ural P f,M''n " 22l2S^S2 Mod"'. craula, bulletin,, and d,s-
thr. month- af.er th. Hart of the '"'- i'%JtZ~r','m> 0V" plv help ,liu,.,e ,l,ul.
Korean
Income for the period was reck-
oned by the Commerce Depart-
ment at the rate of 244 billion dol-
lars a year. The old quarterly
high mark came In the last three
months of 1948 and was at the rate
of 231 billion dollars a year.
WajBM and salaries made up Ihe
biggest pan of the increase, which
was seven per cent higher than tho
previous 1930 quarter.
Reuler
that are led by
expert
local agriculture
Grenade Thrown
Among Dancers
The exhibit was constructed bv
farm, civic, and commercial
groups interested in promoting
more stable and prosperous farm-
ing; in their corrununities. No ad-
mission is charged, and in some
communities (ret coffee and
doughnuts are served by local
SINGAPORE. Jan. 29.
A hand grenade thrown into i
The re- dance hall wounded British sol- rmm
muneration for work alone hit the diers. the dance hoMess and civil- erouP" A similar display in 194M
annual rate or 155 billion dollars, inns. was se*n bv 18,000 persons in 20
Corporation profits also ori- There were 25 casualties communities.
ranged sharply amounting to 11 The incident occurred last nigh!.
and one-half billion dollars be- Tne gn^ae was lobbed Into We
fore taxes for the quarter a 25 . lrt. f ,h iU
EnTmAKr-- Ver,hC "rCV'm,S Semiiic.^fiJTwX
ihree months. 0np BrMlltl Mldi.r and nn Ernu
1'roiits after tnxes were 6,4 nil- *>an woman were reported to o:
Uon dollars, a 1.2 billion dollar *n a serious condition.
1ih reiisc over the previous nuar- ^_^__^_^__
t i fli.-piT,. the new excess profits
tax which was made retroactive !>. ,1 1?:1.a 'PI.*
to July i. Kusia rights rlu
The government pointed out
that prollts Krtw faster than LONDON. Jan. 29.
sales during the period, with nn Soviet Health organisations
increase in the profits-sale
In All Forms
The increasing use of various
forms of fertilizers on United
States farms has caused NrttUsw
i quipmci.i to become the most
diversified of any type of farm
machinery. This is reported by
the United States Department of
Agriculture.
Fertilizer equipment ranges
auto taking special measures to fight the f rom arna||. hand-operated d--
from nine to 9.8 per cent. mftuensa epidemic in Russia. Mos- vices to tractor units, sclf-
Pront* increased most sharply cow rad'0 **'d today. unloading trucks, and aircraft
m-arh 40 per centon non-durable ,,J"f J* ,"lap^!11.;,'!,'.!"""'
equipment npplies fertilisers in
broadcast
,-o.Kls. where heavy demand re- "*g \* !iw X^atMon'
suited in -relatively large" price SSSTJSES' JUS ?S
increases.
the form of igases, liquid. en
perimcnting with new vaccines taIg .! an<1 ,intiy divide
1MU- He warned people against shaking ^3iXI *
i.N.h. hands, kissing children and allow- p"
__. Ing them to ride In buses, tubes
or trains except in emergencies
'Flu suspCvts should call a doctor
rather than visit clinics he said
Children in nurseries suspected of
having influenza were being
promptly isolated.
Describing sulphur drugs as
American officials are givm/ dangerous, ho said, "the body gets lubl(. )m(i'
serious consideration to a change used to them only too easily and 0ne device not only spread
Anti-Red Poliey
Change Considered
WASHINGTON, Jan, 31.
Fertiliser machinery is often
used in conjunction with other
Implements designed to do other
farm Jobs. It can be used with
interchangeable parts that plant,
-eed. dull, and cultivate. Some
machines apply fertilizer while
they plow, plant, and drill vege-
New methods of protecting
woollen goods, synthetic textiles,
and other materials from moths
I developed by scientists
Of the UnHad States Department
of Agriculture. This work is being
done in laboratorien in Savannah.
in ihe State of Georgia, that are
specially equipped to lest the
efforts of many kinds or in^ed*
on tho fabrics.
The moth-proofing research has
bean galni on Dn Dv pact three
,i hi their experiments the
scientists have used 5,000 yards
it goods snd 1.20O pairs
of army trousers.
Th" material was sprayed or
impregnated with chemical solu-
tions and then stacked in storage
rooms with thousands of insects.
In -some cases thp rooms were
also sprayed with the chemicals.
Tho most effective solution was a
mixture of UDT and chlordane.
After a year of usating, the
found lhat most of the
woollen goods were not damaged.
The material was then used in the
manufacture of uniforms The
were hung in sealexi
closets and exposed to insects for
two year-. When inspected they
showed no signs of damage.
The laboratory plant includes
testing rooms, a laundry unit, slor-
age facilHn- laaaamtl for making
special equipment, aud a room
wheie umo.ooo common pests and
I'd under special
11 :,| tetnperatun and humidlt\.
The laboratory has its own flat -
IrU.ill.v ..pcraled lnundry unit
which Is Mad to determine how
many washings the moth-proofed
material can withstand withoul
losing its special characteristics.
The scientists also use the labor-
atory in developing ways to pro-
tect flour bags and other food
packages from insects while keep-
ing then lun'eiit'i n on poisonous
for human use. In addition, the /
re davateptafl ;i technique for
naval aun-cleaning
biuahes from damage by carpel
......nd g means of makuIf
vn'hi lil ......le "f peanui.
corn, ,md soyabcun oils resistant to
inc< ':.
U.S.A. Produns
More Petroleum
World output ol p*'troleiim .'
now about iO.i0i.00O
day. The United States produces
more than half of this, or about
5.900,000 barrels, the New Yera
Herald TriBM*- report! on the
basis of a survey of petroleum
production m the free world com-
pared to lhat of the Soviet Union
and its satellite countries.
"On the basis of the latest
available figures." the newspap
say*. "Russian and Eastern Euro-
pean production of crude petro-
leum is about 805.000 barrels i
day." U.S. figures are estimate!
made by the American Petroleum
Institute, a private trade organi-
zation.
The superiority enjoyed by the
United States and friendly coun-
tries atiaring the responsibility
for maintaining peace is not
ivcrelv the advantage of greate
supplies," the Trismne says I
comprises the ability to produc
in quantity specialUed product
rnd to maintain peak operations
for required expansion in oth>
major industries" It means a!,
the ability to insure "the delivery
of all kinds of products when at
where needed."
The present record VS. pr>
duction is the result of an unpre-
cedented growth during the past
live years. Petroleum companies
have "worked diligently to mod-
ernize and expand, and to Increase
raw material reserves in order to
.nsure capacity to serve an ex-
panding economy," the Tribune
fates. "During these and previous
years efforts have been unremit-
ting to improve the quality oi
products and to develop new
products, uses, and processes."
Domestic capacity to produce
ciude petroleum has been
creased by S5 per cent, while
lenniiig capacity has been
landed by 25 to 30 per cent. In
srtdittan. large syMems of pipe
lines nave been laid, tankei
lloets. have been enlarged and
Modernized, and consumer out-
lets expanded and improved.
Despite the record U S. pro-
duction of petroleum, the Nation
is not yet using Its refineries to
full capacity, taya the Tribune.
It Is estimated that from TiO.000
10 1.000.000 additional barrels
cdiild be produced, it they are
reeded, without damaging the
h'espan of the well*
A Real Swot
(By HOWARD BEftRY)
LONDON
KORTYFIVE-YEAR-OLI) Sid-
ni i Rirhard Daly, chief anitar>
in pec tor ol llford. Essex County,
nukes a hobby of winning a
aemlc distinctions.
His latest and seventeenth s
cess was winning a law examin-
ation which qualified him
practise as an attorney if
wished.
Claiming Io have a photographic
memory and never to forgot,
Daly studies at night and week-
lies. For years he has been
getting through at least one
pace text book weekly and ho
never takes a note.
Daly has become . its-, has
won three Liverpool University
diplomas in hygiene, a Uindon
University diploma in Public Ad-
min istrulion, and a number
awards in town-planning, i
estate management and meat
trade technique.
"Some people think I am crazy
to go on collecting degrees at my
age." said Daly, "but I prefer to
learn rather than lumber up my
mind with books that are nol
really entertaining "
Daly studies with Bach or Beet-
hoven playing on the radio. "I
find I need good classical music,'
he said. "I swot better with
the radio on."
Now Daly is toying with the
Idea of studying tor a It A. degree
In French and Norwegian.
Rut there is at least two blind
spots In Daly's remarkable powers
of memory He forgets names.
"I often have to apologize to peo-
ple for that." he said And his
16-year-old daughter. Olgs. said
"Daddy often forgets my pocket-
money."
I,N.S.
of policy that would involve assist- they therefore prove useless as fertilizers, but also places
i___! _ *-...... i -*___-_
bands at different depth
spacing!* in either tilled or pasture/
land. It also can place fertilizer
as a side dressing along crop rows
of all normal spacings. With a
:.ceder added, ihe machine can
open the furrow, drill grass or
grain seed, and apply the fer.
SH/P DRIFTING
..._ Anti-Communist guerillas on the patient develops pneumoni
the Chinese mainland, usually ______________Rentes-
reliable sources said hero today. ^
diverting Communist strength REDS CAN BE STOPPED
which might otherwise be em- Dean Rusk
ployed ugainst Korea or Indo-
china these officials believe. WASHINGTON.
Thiee questions havo to bo Dean Rusk. Assistant Secretary ulSjgr,
answered before any final decision of State said here that American
can be reached it was said, troops were staying in Korea to
These were show that Communist aggression
How effective and determined could be stopped.
are the guerilla forces? Rusk in charge of Far Eastern
Would arms und equipment affairs said on u television pr^v V!' ,',-,,,. .
furnished to them not be allowed gramme: 'We cannot afford to The two halves of the 9,720 ton
t. fall into enemy hands ? Officials leave Red China and its neigh- Panamanian tanker. Janke which
ot present see tsvo primary bourn under the impression that broke in heavy seas yesterday near
military reqt;-Tements regarding the forces of Peking are irresisi- Cape Flnisterre. Northwestern
China. One is to continue to able and that Red China's neign- Spam were to-day seen drifting
strenghten Formosa's defences bours must now come to terms south with sailors still aboard,
against the day when Chinese with the Communists at the coit according to a report from La
Communists try to carry out their of their freedom. Coruna. Nine men were in UM
threat to conquer the Island. The Rusk said that United States aft section and seven in the .ore-
other is to use any reasonable ability to meet the world-wK-e part. Various ships were stand-
means to divert Communist threat of Communism was im- ing by. Yesterday two ships took
strength. proving steadily. off 23 sailors.
Renter. Renter. -R.
QUAKER OATS
nourishment bargain 1
COOK AT All QUAKtn OAIS OFFfRS
AMKt MINIULS.......
MOM nortiNs.......
MOM CUIOHVMATIS
M0t VITAMIN* I g|/
.n j mmi t aw*
. HfJ M aaj BMrin
Corner
Beware this S-bend. It can
cause olTencc if not kept
scrupulously clean. Sprinkle
in some Harpic,* leave u long a* ponibtolbe
'HarpicY thorough action will dean, disinfect and deodceiae
the whole pan even where no brush can teach.
HARPIC
MO
THE SPECIAL LAVATORY CaJ
UliLSS
FOR
LESS
AT
THE MODERN
Dress Shoppe
(BROAD STREF.T)
no.VT ;et
XKHVOI'S ABOUT
INFLUENZA
KEEP FIT OX
ItOVICII
SPECIAL
OFFERS In
h.XHIKS'
vorrox
UHKSSES
Washable lively Patterns
MOO earn
LAMES*
SHIRTS
Vi,. Cation PrlnU
S1.9B each
LIMES'
TAii.imr.i*
SHIHTS
In A Ftnr Awmrimrnl 1
Colour. S6A0 rich
H.WSKH
xvt.nx
STOVKIXKS
51 Oaute 15 Denier
IX 14 per pr.
THE MODERN
Dress Shoppe
BROAD STREET
YEAR BOOK 1951
The Advocate Co Lid. will publish a Year Book of Barbados
In 1951.
The Year Book will contain three parts:
(1) Handbook giving detailed statistics and information on
a wide variety of subjects e.g., agriculture, finance,
industries, trade, communications, tourism, hotels, sport,
art, literature and all the things we want to know about
Barbados but have until now not been able to find
under one covsr.
(2) Special supplement on Barbados' industries: e.g. sugar,
soap, butter, lard, ice, gas, tobacco, electricity, hotels
etc.
(3) A Who's Who of Barbadians you should know about
A local committee comprising among others Hon. V. C. Gale
M.L.C., Managing Director of the Advocate Co. Ltd.. Vice
President of the Barbados Chamber of Commerce, Mr. George
Hunte, Assistant Editor of the Barbados Advocate. Mr. Neville
Connell Director of the Barbados Museum and Mr. Trevor Gale.
Advertising Manager of the Barbados Advocate will be respon-
sible for the publication.
The compilers of the Year Book want to make sure that tho
Year Book is representative of all aspects of life in Barbados
and it is taking this opportunity to invite secretaries ol Societies.
Clubs, Institutions, and business, social and other organisations
of all kinds to send particulars about their respective organisa-
tions immediately or not later than April 15th 1951.
Year Book,
C/o Editor, Barbados Advocate,
34 Broad Street.
Names and addresses of all those to be considered for
inclusion in Who's Who will also be welcomed.
Advertisements close April 30th 1951.
Advertisers are asked to get in touch with
Mr. Trevor Gale.
Advertising Manager,
Barbados Advocate,
34 Broad Street.
This to one publication that no advertiser can afford to
ignore because no one interested in Barbados can afford to M
without the Year Book of Barbados 1951.
(AN ADVOCATE PUBLICATION)

PACE FOUR
BARBADOS ADVOCATE
TIIVRRDAV. FEBRIARV 1. 1M1
BAKBADOS M WUmi
Priato4 kv
Th. r.day. 1 i!> i li. r>. 1 ir,
i \< l\4. ISM I s
I DURING the debate in the Legislative
Council on the bill to provide for the
Registration of voters Hon. Dr. Cato in a
maiden speech pointed out a situation
which will inevitably arise and which Will
have lo be remedied under the Represen-
tation of the People Act. He Hid that II
was not fair to retain a system under
which a few people in a district had the
right to elect a similar number of repre-
sentatives as a district with a large number
of voters.
The question of proportional represen-
tation is one which must i>c considered in
view of the changes which will arise in
future. The passing of the adult
bill has already given rise to many compli-
cated issues which come with the changing
of any electoral machinery.
It has already been suggested that the
representation in the House of Assembly
he changed by means of a re-allocation of
seats, ft was then argued that if parishes
like St. Joseph and St. James had the right
to return two members lo the General
Assembly, it was only fair that ptftlfaw
like St. Michael and Christ Church should
be allowed a greater number.
The answer given to this was the sug-
gestion of single member constituencies.
By this means the parishes would be divid-
ed into wards each entitled Ij return one
member. If this had been carried out it
might have been possible to have divided
the larger parishes into a greater number of
wards so that they would have returned
more members to the House than the
smaller parishes.
Dr. Cato now comes to the point and re-
minds the Government that sooner or later
the issue will have to be faced and propor-
tional representation given.
It may be that in the next amendment
to the Representation of the People Act
provision could be made for an increase of
the membership of the House from 24 to
30 members so that the additional seats
could be allocated to those constituencies
with high population figures.
As an alternative it might be possible tn
use the figures now being collected for
registration purposes, so that u specified
number of areas of 450 voters each could
be used as a unit for representation.
Consideration should be given now to
the matter so that the issue can be faced
at the earliest opportunity.
WATER
. THE question of the necessity for one or
two rigs for the Waterworks Department
was raised by Hon. F. C. Hutson during
the debate in the Legislative Council on
a resolution to provide the necessary funds.
In this island the matters- affecting the
improvement of the water system have
been entrusted to a Board ot which Mr.
Hutson is a member and his point now
leaves the public wondering what the dis-
cussion is about.
While it is recognised that the detailed
expert engineering knowledge necessary
for dealing with the island's water supply
cannot be expected from the average voter,
it is surprising that in an island where
water is the prime mover in agriculture
that the public knows so little about water
improvements intended,
i Can it be that too little use is made of
the public Press to disseminate knowledge
affecting agriculture?
Our llradi is S.i*
A Pomibl>-
To The Editor, Tlie Advocate,
SIR.Please Brant DM Oppor-
tunity to make u suggestion willi
rejprd to the forthcoming Inter-
colonial cricket loumanv-nt.
Judging from the number of
bowlers invited to practice, one
immediately realises that the
selectors have grown conscious of
the dreadful dearth of bowline
talent in the Island. The two
completed practice matchc* have
Shown most of the bowlers to he
equally innocuous. Our slow bowl-
ing department is undoubtedly
very weak for Hoed, the best of
the lot. Is indeed a problem.
An Empire team is presently
touring Gtenada and with it Is A.
Holder a slow left arm spinner
one who ratilb iptm the ball
who Is spreading havoc amongst
the Grenada batsmen. Having
joined Empire only recently,
Holder has not ha'l the opportun-
ity
learn but the meic ltd thai h*
has been selected on performance
in the nets alone speaks well foi
his bowling ability.
As C. Huntc has tinned out to
be our most recent bttUi
so it is possible that HobSi i
be the answer to our headaches
for a spin bowler. In lh<
of the game it would be a good
Idea if some provision bv
so that he could be inclu>
the next trial match and giv<
opportunity to prove his wortn.
SPECTATOR.
30.1.51.
Russia's A few Empire3 Will Take Canadian
Plays To Bermuda
'917-

* lemnlj
i l-enln
. lit) mil not Sltempt to

favour ot amis) and lo
operli
By DAVID J DALLIM
I i>e of econoi
xpanslonthe newest chapter in
tnhutiiii MUM <>( the Ntl 1*5 historywas maiU.
Leader
tor the Comintern's "help" durum
Flam three decades. Mosciw b
Tiir. .Air. Urn niandoH $io,O00,0f"i
ir financial assistance to the
Bulgarian Communist party and
.isststance lo Its leaders during
' | :
ly wa*
as external assets ?_?'J2PJ3S3LS\n!5Lin bulgarlan Communist party must
.t Socialist " *" JU*T*,. .V" P-y us debt. No dc.
ETC ?UII lie. *" been published to disclose
*
he Chi
aiM ....-
1 "v lhc NKVT in culliiburutluii
I I n aallMd the i nly lln lhc . Tmx^t,Mt long 'ho ofhfr European satrlht.-.. III
Important nop M frm ;itl cluilinK Oatmany. i>..y on the
The ILIUM amldl ,in. 1 i "'sl' ,h''" "
h ll-HnS^. " "
i.urla. No flfurei noi i addition, the .re > Eastern
...I".;.- satellites will be presented with
,' S, I. an Wrieln "!' "lc rv,i,
11... u ,- ilT'.iiVu considerable. When iho Soviet
lea*-.ocrumUonnow In Its Bvernmcnt claims lhat Its
SST^M a" to. ^r 1- approximately
lllth and. In some places. It. sixth reached Its prewar level, it |.
. rptaS country, """i?," no imfl' *'*" U"""
The third n...nnrf of er.,n..n,le 2?""' " nl'o improve.1
- 1945. That Ihls tould
bile thi
m v. r ment
i NKVT) does not
in liir.-isn Trade. II
......I J10"
uld not
rcparaUonswhich, from four "i>(cn while threr million
nations, have aggregated $900.- are kept In the army and a large
._ 000,000. Most of the reparations part of Russian industry is still
ST.'.."-. : SSTL2 .reilta have pr^ldedI tSr ealcu- e^y with mlllUry produelion ha.
ms to l>e made on the basis been due to these eight methods
1838 prices. Prices in the 0f obtaining foreign assistance (in
meantime have almost doubled, so addition lo UNRRA and Lend-

Miss Flora Rolwon
chance,
London. Then r.
ing Cler:> - Robert
London found
Mimulatm
which iirmiv ed
.
nnd lh'>
n ;
by some as his finest piny; and
of coarse "Daphne l-aureola"
i controversy ninong the
critics when it appeared In i49,
nut the public bed no doubt iboul
, r gboul Den I Edith Evans
brilliant ereetlon ot ''Daphne'' end
ta wcclM. run-
ning for one year to full houses
Many diwerning people, mclud ng
I believe that
some of his finest writing Is to
Ik- found in playi not yet
Londonof "John Knox"
duced in Glasgow! and "Tho
Queen's Comedy". The Snal ept
i ttter pley, which wea
I99Q BcUnbusWh Fcsti-
v.ii. i. remericabl< for it; Inten-
Mty of feelun.'. Ill humanity, and
its crafl
why Bridle's death Li
.it his ngc ha
r^t j II (trowing intellectually and
n'tie. stn| Id er as a
playwrianl 't i Impoaalble to fore-
ceat what hii poeition wu tinally
be, but two thutaa maj ii-' noted.
not the
bt| 11 ti ksn luccaaaea enlv, but
numb) la
knownhave :i in- plaee In the
-
Ciel theettee eH over the country.
more and more
Wl I
nil plays reed for B
17 Hrtis: ns well as a stage
craftsman,
He thought ih.it London's dom-
was unhealthy, and some
i i took the If
found IOW Citizens'
Theatre, which under hm ihair-
nanehip has become tbe leading
"i-epcrtory" tlu?atre In Britain To
:in- ha nve uitatlnted time.
thought and work, and sneroui
upport; nnd he used it
for the encouragement of young
writers and players Not n few of
then will llwaya thank llrldie for
Ii' kindly and wise advice and
criticism and for "Citizens" he
rrabt The Forrignn Reel" and
Other litfbt pieces which give rein
to that humour which shines out
in h'l autobiography 'One Way
Of LiVine" and in "Mr, Bridie's
Alphabet for Little Glasgow
Highbrows" and "Tedious and
l,i fer
It Is difficult for nnc who
Ml friendih'p to write
moderately of his persOfl qualt-
Uei He was the kindliest .in I
i' ions of men. and the
host of good company with a salty
wit, an unprediclabii' wmtl liresis-
tible sense of fun and of the Incon-
gmousth's Rive* MWOtUr to even
nil most serious plays^and thai
balk simplicity and delight in
.simple things which ao often
marks the reiilly fine mind. His
passing Is an irreparable loss to
B host of tnends in all walks of
life, and of course parti, iilarly In
the theatre and the world of
letters. I believe that "Tobias and
the Angel" resulted fr.
should write a play
about "a really lovable < 'laracter"
and in the i\pochr\pha he
found old Tobit. That phrase
RDpl
ObeorM Haw
N.W.D.
By JOHN PATERSON
TORONTO.
It's a bit. complicated, but an adventurous
Australian and a foot-loose Irishman arc
taking a series of plays to Bermuda in order
to put acting in Canada on a year-round
paying basis.
Bruce Yorke. lurmerly of Sydney. N.S.W.,
and partner Michael Saulier of Dublin, have
contracted for a nine-month series of plays
in the newly-completed theatre at the luxuri-
ous Bermtidiana Hotel, Hamilton, Bermuda
They will use Canadian actors and tech-
nicians.
The venture, an oulgrowth of several
years' effort to put Canadian acting on a
profitable basis, is part of a comprehensive
plan which includes summer stock in two
..tus uk) a winter subscription series
pl'iys in 25 Ontario towns and cities.
A yen for travel took Yorke to Shanghai
wheie he landed with $25 and no return
ticket shortly before the outbreak of the
Second World War. After a brief fling at
selling tobacco in troubled North China he
joined the Intelligence Corps of the Indian
Army as an b^terTOtpJltion officer of Japanese
prisoners.
A post-war holiday in New York resulted
in his meeting Canadian producer Brian
Doherty and getting a job with him. He was
advance agent for two cross-Canada tours
with "The Drunkard" and "Arsenic and Old
Lace." Later, he started a summer theatre
at Niagara Falls, Ont.
Siullu'i's wanderings, meanwhile, had
lunded him in PeterIxtrough, Ont. He had
left Dublin for school in England. He was
in a few English films and stage plays when
the Second World War broke out. He joined
the R.A.F. and, transferred to Canada, switch-
ed to the R.C.A-F. After discharge he
studied acting in New York. Then followed
a United States tour with Cornelia Otis
Sic inner.
Last summer the two combined their sum-
mer theatres at Niagara Falls and Pelerbor-
/ough. The companies alternated, playing
week about in the two Ontario cities.
Yorke, anxious to put the business on a
steady basis, visited 150 towns and cities
southern Ontario in an effort to sell them a
plan for a winter subscription series of plays.
"We got a good reception and eventually
iigned up 25 centres," he said. "In many
we found there hadn't been 'live' professional
theatre for 25 or -JO years."
The Ontario season opens in Cornwall
mid-February. Bermuda starts in April. The
three companies will be rotated, each spend-
ing three months in Bermuda. It will be a
sort of holiday with pay for them.
Yorke was enthusiastic about what he
called a "showcase for Canadian talent, pre-
senting them before visitors from the United
States and Europe ' (C.P.)
Conscription And Control
Of Prices Issues In Canada
OTTAWA.
The new Parliamentary session coming
into Mng at the end or January will show-
early effects of some high-powered, strategic
lobbying.
Two main fronts will bear the brunt of
Ihe lobbying, and both are necessarily em-
barrassing to the government. One is con-
scription, the other price controls.
Government policy has been to avoid tact-
fully either of these, but indications are that
it will be mure diilicult this session.
Already in January, the Canadian Legion
has come out four-square for conscription,
and called on its branches from coast to
coast to petition their members of parliament
on the subject. In addition, the Conference
of Defence Associationsconsisting of form-
er army officers in 12 military associations
tern-wed a demand it has been making annu-
ally since the war. It adopted unanimously
a resolution calling for a policy of selective
service in the reserve force.
The head of Canadian army forces over-
seas in the Second World WarGen. H. D. G.
Crararhas been saying stronc. things about
compulsory training for several years.
On the prices front, the government is
faced with resolutions from various organ-
izations which have expressed alarm at the
rising cost of living.
The bulk of Canadian organized labor has
thrown its weight into the price fight. Four
major labor organizations, representing more
than 1.000,000 workers, have prepared a brief
for presentation to the cabinet early in the
new sessionprobably next menth. The or-
ganizations are the Canadian Congress of
I.abor. the Trades and Labor Congress, the
Canadian and Catholic Confederation of
Labor and the Dominion Joint Legislative
Committal of the Railway Transportation
Brut hoi hoods.
Ill addition, the executive of the Canadian
Association of Consumersan organization
Mrisatod by the ^H-ornment to survive after
balping mi tn unt.lining prices during the
BteondWorU Ww has called for twne form
of rent control, at least(C.P.)
D. V. SCOTT
& CO., LTD.
TO-DAY'S SPECIALS
t THE COLONNADE
1 -ua'.ly NOW
Tins SPAGHETTI IN TOMATO SAUCE
WITH CHEESE
TinsOVAI.TINE (Medium)
Bottles ALI.SOPPS BEER
S .19 $ .17
.7.1 .60
.21; .211
W/WWAV/Vrt
We Have ...
GALVANISE DOWN PIPES
WATER HEADS
RIDGE CAPS
BARBED WIRE
MESH WIRE
I", W. IVV
LASHING WIRE
16, 14, 12 and 10 Gauge
WOVE WIRE 24" and 36"
CHAIN '..'. 3-16", W, & 5-16"
, ltt"
WILKINSON & BAYNES Co.. Ltd.
Successors To
C.S. PITCHER & CO.
Phone. 4472,4687,
//
INTERNATIONAL
If
ONE OF THE GREATEST NAMES
IN THE PAINT INDUSTRY.
As Agents of International Paints, Ltd., we can
offer you a wide range of the famous "International"
brands, namely:
RED ROOFING PAINTS
"Danboline" Anti-corrosive Paint (for galvanized
iron).
"Propeller" Ready Mixed Oil Paint (for wooden
shingle, asbestos cement, and alumini-
um).
WALL PAINTS
"Propeller" Dry Distemper (for exterior walls).
"Lagomatl" Flat Oil Paint (for interior walls).
PAINTS FOR EXTERIOR AND INTERIOR
WOODWORK AND METALWORK
"Lagollnc" Undercoating, and "Lajjoline" Enamel.
PAINT FOR FURNITURE AND GENERAL
HOUSEHOLD PURPOSES
"Interntrtional" Quick Drying Enamel.
ALUMINIUM PAINT
"Danboline-SUverettc" Aluminium Paint.
BITUMINOUS PAINT
"Bituguard" Black Bituminous Paint.
MOLASSES TANK PAINT
"International" Molasses Tank Paint (for the in-
terior of molasses storage tanks).
YACHT PAINTS G VARNISHES
For underwater surfaces, topsides, hoottopptngs,
decks, superstructures, masts, spars, and general
purposes.
Try these Surperb Paints, and be Convinced
DA COSTA & CO.. LTD.
- AGENTS
phone GODDARDS for
M
Appvtiainfi
RrpnkStiHlH
JEtXIED CHICKEN
JELLIED TUHKEY
ANCHOVIES .MAC'KFRAL
PIU'IIAKDS
CHEESE PRUNES
DATES Flos
COCKTAIL SAUSAGES
ASPARAGUS (Whole!
ASPAttAGUS (Tips)
cos
MARSHMAI.LOWS
DINNER MINTS
FRUIT i VF.GF.-
TABLES
BEERS and
GOLD lilt HID RUM
TOP NOTl .1 RUM
SANDEMAS'S SKERRY
RHINE WINKS
MKRRY
DRY M'CK
VIF.M-: CURB
4 M.AIIKTTES
Embassv Cigarettes In tins of
25 at 48c p.T tin
Chur.-hman Cigarcltei. 'n Unt
of 25 jt 30c. imt tin.
!

TIIIRSDAY. FEBRIWRV 1, 1951
RARBVIXI* ADVOCATE
PAGE FIVE
Lady
Baby
Savage Visits
St. Margaret's
Welfare Clinic
Lady Savage, wife i.f Hi-; Excellency ihe Governo
panied by their daughter. Miss Pat Savago and !
Arne. Social Welfare Officer, paid a visit to trje St. Mar-
garet's Branch of the St. John's Baby Wtlfaic Clink
day evening.
150 Baptised
ONF III NltKH) AND FIFTY
converts were baptised '
the New Testament
God held their second Bapf
Ceremony yesterday. At the first
which was held at Brandon*!
Beach on Sunday morning ovei
300 were baptised. This second
one was held at the back of Rev.
Winter's home, "Winslnw", Fon-
tabelle.
The ceremony began at 8
o'clock, but from early In the
momlnr people began to gather.
They came from all over the
island. Rev. James B. Reesor, the
faith healer, was one of the bap-
tists.
On Sunday night 168 people
were received into the Church of
God and on Tuesday night over
100. Approximately 2,800 people
nave been converted throughout
the Convention and many more
hundreds, who could not get into
the Queen's Park Shed, raised
their hands signifying their inten-
tion to live for Christ.
Rev. Heesor, after nbout two
weeks in the island, left (Ml
morning for San Juan. Puerto
Rico.
LARGE QIWTiTIKS of flying
fish and dolphin are definite-
ly on the western coast of the
island Just waiting to be caught.
Mr. D. W. Wiles, Fisheries Ofllcer
told the Advor.il*
On Tuesday 3.800 pounds of! the ladies on the iplendld
flying flsh and 535 pounds of dol-, thev we doing Tlii- cl
pltin passed through the Public
Market and fairly good nalnhai
I brought in along Qm Paynes
AJ1 '.lue .".rule (omphmenCarit?
.tors' Book at the end of

I inch Of the i
15 children on the roll. About tw
I
accompanied by Iheir parents, and
some by their *imll I"
a is the habit in Qm
country parishes where many
ave to be out working all
day.
The clinic is always open on
i 'Mings, so Lad.
' "V li.i-
work that is done by the regular
helpers One help..
big rnilk and other item
Another wai weighing I '
a third wh recording: iln
on forms prepared for tfc
A fourth helper- trained nurse
was checking up on the babies'
fixing navel bands, giv-
ing advice about feeding, etc.
Lady Savane looked on with
interest at this form of Social
Walfara Week thai | aimed at
helping the iteople of V
raise sturdier children. ratAef
than to follow Iheir own methods
which may be described as a
cateh.-as-e.ilth-van wi.
infant mortality.
Th.. Clinic was founded by
Madame Iiill on June 18
Visimrs' Impressions
La I SeVUa ".rote in the Vis-
tors Book \ (sited 0 clinic with
Miss Arne. I am most |
! d, end do c< igratulate
Bay coast.
During last
boat brought i
Oistins. On
another boat
veek one fishing
i 48 dolphins
Tuesday night
ight 42 and
.......
wen organiaed, Ifouu i
dren were happj
work being done.
! wi'-h tho clinic evei-> -n...-^ '
\!i S ivagc wrOUi "This is |
very weU organiaed and well run
clinic."
Miss- Ar-ie's contribution was:
"Visited todav with Lad
SIX AND A HALF acres of flrst r !" much lrnuresse.t
crop ripe canes were burnt ,|U',',:K busmchke atmosphere
and the quiet competence of the
helpers. The babies on the
ivholo seemed fitter than othen 1
1 -i elaewhan "
Lady Savage waa presentci with
iquet at the end of I
Another week-end 11 ie at Step-. Among those Drawn) were
ney Plantation. St. George des- Rcvd A. Mellor Vicar of St Mar-
troyed a quantity of second crop naret's- and Mrs Mellor; Madame
brought them to the'Careenage.
2IX AND A HALF acres of first
crop ripe canes were burnt
.vhen a fire broke out at I
Plantation. Christ Church over
the week-end. The canes
owned by W. T. Watson and
insured.
ripe canes which were also in-
sured. They belong to Bulkeley
Ltd.
On Tuesday night n fire at Man-
grove Plantation burnt three and
a half acres of first crop ripe
canes. They are owned by Car-
rington Ltd. and were insured.
A FILM SHOW will be given at
the monthly reunion of the
Combeimere School Old Boys'
Association on Friday, I\
at 8 p.m. It is as follows : Brit-
ish News. Sheep Dog, Our College
and Cricket.
There will be a discussion after
the film show, it is expected to
see a large turn oul of old boys.
A NEWS ITEM reached the
Advocate yesterday from
London which said that a Rhode
Island (red) hen belonging to
Miss Ellen Jones of Bailey Farm,
Bodorgan. Anglesey. Wales laid an
egg weighing six and a half
ounces.
Perhaps Miss Jones is feeding
her fowls on Barbados feed but
still a local New Hampshire has
beaten her Rhode Island bv an
ounce and n half. This New
Hampshire laid an egg weighing
8 ounces. It is owned by Gordon
Matthews of Constitution Road.
Moo. k
"open
AT DISTRICT "B "
a jury returned
verdict" when an enquiry Into "tin
circumstances surrounding th.*
death of Edward lllackman wai
held. Blnckman's body was dis-
covered at Silver Sands by Lionel
Ross on Friday. December 20
when he reported the matter to
the Police.
The body was removed to the
Christ Church Almshouse Mor-
tuary where Dr. Charles Manning
performed an autopsy.
Ifill: Mrs D. Simpson;' Mrs. W
Pavne; Mr;:. K. Newsam; Mrs. C
Mayei M C.Pti Mr c D
Ramaay.
I Won Tin
$5.00
liy Paul Foster
UM Your Qyag
ISSalBw'i Evening
AdvoeAte ..... that the Coca Cola:
Ma bottlea
i .I. The due ra
bottle caps of the coca .
Barbados
the correct answer, it was 1
narde.l gue^s picture that has
Uthed to date.
The Your Guess" coi
i Fvenii*! AdvsesU
on Monday 30th October, 19*0. I
was a popular feature from the
tJit. And no wond< rt Coi
dollars was paid
who guessed correctly whal llw
picture was all about.
Every Monday n "Your Guess'
picture appears, and the publii
is- asked to goes-:. Whal
Where is tin,.* "What is th<
point 0f this pa
the picture II .-: i it", ate, jus
depending en UM
Every w io o'cloc'
the Editor opens the cn%'o!opcs on<
by one until the Bra)
pened.
About a month after H
Guess" competition atari
Editor told rne. "Why i
- picture that r, i
guess.** **Tell von what I'll do'
he said "Y u take i ptotan tha
no one can gue the corr*
have the
liars.
So this week, the >.\.
goes to me.
Several Guesses
Although no one guessed cor-
rectly, then wai no shortage oi
answers Ionian the Editor began
day,
r> few of i me of the
gliesse*. "The Rum I
A Reft- i Party at
Hotel in honour of 'he
Crleketen I
nt of Ibis picture I
taaty heverafte,** "Seine ha
me hasn't," ate.
Tins week's | turn wai
laMfl at SeaarelL Pan < i Ov
p-x nt th' t c a 'plane* which
called here everv Saturday change
ear at Rari.d
has a bar. which i rim bv the
When he Rat
i>i
r U adaya BvurdMi
Advocate ihOWad some of the"
went on
ward the *plue on Satui
Briluin May
Buy West'
German Meal
Painter Remanded
Without Hail
DAVID VAN I'trTTlN a 23.
old pain* r of M
Michael was remanded
without bail bv Hi. Worship Mr,
H. A Talma Police Maj
' A" until Feb' u.n v ;
whan ha appeared i>tore him
yeaterday on i el
iiir the sum of $6,000 I
brcy Birch Director of the Pro
gressive Motor Bus Co D vreil
Road, without a reasonable cause
and using threats against him.
The offence wai Mleeed to have
been commlUed i ii January 23
Mr. V.. Harrow Is uppenhng on
behalf of Pultin while Capt. K
Orani is proaacuting, from infor-
mation received, for the Police.
Yesterday when th'-
ary evidence was stan
Prosecution called on two wit-
nesses. CANBERi.a. Jan. 31
Before Mr. Talma remanded Negotiations between Britain
Puttin there was a queMi Ula fir n 15-year meat
rhether bail should be gnntod
LONDON Jan. 31.
Britain may buy meat from
I
bad In UM
Commons todaj
aid h(i waa looking hkto the
ihera could
any neRoliations the Govcrn-

could bo imixirted from
Germany without danger to
animal health in Britain.
It would also have to be :,;itis
ed that methods of "
nd slai. up t"
standards require
WebVi ., made in
reply to a question by a Con-
servative Member who asked
whether n vet bean
completed with W*
bH mutton
Britain, teafcr,
His Razor Tames' Them I Buv Bri,i*
Twcnly years ago you could have |CM la Mai.ltn's Lane
.nul COldd have got a haircut for ei^rr. MBit ITOIH I I
side barber. TttM Qrlfltth. Today Fix/, charge! one shilling
and he cuts behind the Advocate at the corner of Mc Gresor
In The Park
Yesterday
ANYONE walking through
A shilling i* tan
cutttng pi
Will *MV to (MY 3li -
ometime* 3s
b-rliers get work. noL
ih> mueli by their *kill. for *s
Pitz tcld the Adveeale p
Queen's Park yesterday wouta:**ro is not mud
Uead how the pavemelll'h sk II Of Hie wayside barber,
along the main thoroughfare are,0' Bridfotown who have all been
crumblmR quickly, BobM of the Jo ''"' bualnaai for many years.
Ko are in sreal need o( J**9 a"' aU hand. iili the
repair and yesterday Ihe gutter fT,*fors- Cul ,,lpy 8" ""
were Uttered with paper ' lhrv aro of rnendiy ditpoti-
,lul. hon aiKl if. as Fit/ w.'ll tell you.
In great contrast to this wei ,h*' H1'1 Of cob." Of
the gardens which were dean BndJc?ur** F,[t tan t10*"!' "I* a f^n-
.he grass around the flower U-.i-"""K '""* "" '' ,0P'C that It in
were well trimmed. The steel shed!lhc ne*"'
was being cleaned. I
Some of the wooden cribs ware] '""t Hair Fr Nolhinc
Um hhc-i I
There was a phward pinned Upl fd/ lias bean ;i haJreuttei ItOW
Mitside the Barknouae which rai
Tree V* Centi :i he used to
he few ladies who were msid,- the ''."'V':"' KoBd- h
ni.tdim; handling the naai
irranginK the boxes of cotton sroo)
vere navuu. -i auii
Kawkei ked wRt
akes. fruits and sweets were seen
ere in the park. Men
pparently unemployedUsed
iround on the partly rotten cribs
.aiting for etnathing to turn up
At the other end of the park nea;
the Oovei I
very laric heap of rotten leaves
which seem'.l t.. Ii;tv(- been dc-
.une.
The artificial lake was empty
nnd here and there at the boNon
ere Rreen patches of moss.
Meal Negotiations
Hits Overloaded
Vincent Brandford of St. John
was found guilty ye-Icrday of
overloading the motor bus J-27?
on Fair Field Itoad on December
20.
His Worship Mr II A Talma
before whom the case v
ordered Brandford to pay n fine
of 15/- and I costs in 28 days
or in default one month's Impris-
onment with hard labour
not. Mr. Barrow
i.it h- saw no reason
NUld D0< be granted
i in w.i. not what ha HPeWld lerni
pew n. Capt. Gran*
rested the point that If I ,,
are granted a substantial
nount should be i
Mr. Talma told than iii^i tha
Offence was a KtiOUl and rare
id he Mi within I
that if the person to whi
threats were made was anxious
about his safety then he saw no
iced for bail.
FAULTY BSAKFS
Afler pleading guilty of driving
motor car M-2?4 with InefBcieni
brakes on Waterford Road. Mac
Donald Garner of Jackman. St.
Michael was fined 3 to be paid
by mqnthly instalments or in
default two months'imp< .
by His Worship Mr. H. A. Talma
yesterday.
The offence was committed on
December 22 and the case was
brought by the Police as a result
of an accident on Waterford Road.
Court For Divorce And
Matrimonial Causes
In the Court for Divorce and
Matrimonial Causi
Honour the Acting Chief JudtfS
Mr. J. W. B Chcnery. pronounced
decree absolute In the suit
F. w ner) and
D. M K. Storey (Respondent J
There was nd order as to costs.
Petitioner was repr*.
Mr JS B Dear ins-
Messrs Hutchlnson & Banfleld
contract are si an advai
John Mc Wen, Australli
id today, Tu n
deadlock In iiegotlatloni foi
1 WO, lamb
and mutton under existing long-
tertn coMracti l
Pi Od Ministry Oflicials
rrtee in Australia In
too odjust-

They wpuld examine Australia's
I i.asonably emcient pro-
duction" because that
basis of pnee review formula
Mc Wen said.
Reuter.
Cook With
Newspaper
WASHINGTON
wives have a few ln-
1 n to the problems
of ceotdnj withoul electricity, gas
or firewood in a national or local
emergency.
Some of their helpful hints.
gathered during the process of
making the best of bad condition!
' outposts, are included
the New Jango (JUNIOR
ARafY NAVY QUn-D ORGAN-
IZATION) cookbook.
When deprived of electricily.
pas and firewood, they recommend
Bveral sheets of newspaper'
be gathered. The newspapers
should be opened and cut into
strip.': or ns,.,| H
lo best suit the need.
The papers ought to be rolled
piece then. Before
reaching the end of the roll, nc-
nrdJng to the service wives.
mother piece of newspaper should
I-. add) b.
They recommend that you then
continue rolling tightly until you
have a tight, thick roll. This
c tied with a string nnd
clipped Into a quantity of paraffin.
An alternative is to melt candles
onto the roll until it is thoroughly
When rolled, the m | .
should fit a num
with Ihe lid removed. The roll
should bg inserted in the can and
atrnin saturated with pai
They tlun r.commend that a
number two-and-a-half sire can
*w minel ured on the side i*
tha lid with :i can opener snd
another hole be punched into the
te side at the bottom
The small can is lo be pU*vd
beneath Um I. rftr I aa and thi
paraffin is to be lighted Tu.
larger can serves as the stova
This method of cooking was used
' earl Harbour
altar the bombing in December,
19*1.
The soryice wives also recom-
mend that in case of a stoppage In
electric current a i>eanut may bt
used for Uhiminatioa,
The |x>anut is to be pressed lnl-
i s-.ft object, such us fruit, and
the pointed end of the peanut n
to he lighted with :. match. This
to make an excellent
mey cmdie.
l .vs.

nothing Culling achool ho-s'
hair was by \v\y of pit
At the time when Fitz used to
On the boys' fa
oner bays \. ii
Si to established barbers used to
ugh at then and tall ihem they
Could get lustfee if they sought a
faoun -i law. Inferring thai F1U
gssd tc rnake a hack of I
liui Fil/ did not .mud.
\u< i raari of praetlce, ha
went Into M l.ano and
tayed there alMHit live -
t.rcctis Ijhc and
afterwards to the Lowei Green
He has been culling hair Dohini
Ihe Advocate fci nearly 10 raari
Haircutttng i- not the onl.
trade which lt*a inn nt Ho bad
IT spell at shoe making
V th..ughl that shoe-making
entailed t-i nuuli silling down
dint and that li
i h..ii euttlr) i th r
Huled To IV Lean
Ai one nine Kn/ waa a stone
lie sniil that continuous
li body and kept
' im loan Bnd he did not Uk.* to
1m- lean When he said this he
in.Hs.-if. implying thai
one could tea that ha la a fairly
leek man now.
Sea voars ago to out
lur-foot block stone cost in
Whan ."'H eama across n
hail stone It would take about
an hour to cut it.
other wayside barbers beside
Fit? carry on iheir trade in the
Lowei Onsen llmeks Street and
on ihe upper Wharf.
li is Intereating to watch a
having a man. Yesterday
ii o'clock Kiuavas shavinr
the man sat'sleepinc on
g u, --fool high bench with his
hiirk arched and his neck craned.
fit* said when you are BMH|
the feeling that
vou would sleep. It is just like
0 i play music to > W I
and tame him for the
whi:e, he said.
n! ii I in-- In Aniorit'ii
LONDON
American antique dealer Fred-
erick P Victoria ssid that Britain
i-. running dry of old treasures.
Victoria had been tounnR
Europe for over a month and
found it difileult to find anything
ccittng.
. t.-ris:
are hard to find in
Englind and France. Somehow
Um w*.rld i* running dry. Dealers
BBsM t.i America
if they want to buy rsfaasai
antiques *
l "ew back to the United
States with a few priceless treas-
ures, any wayincluding Marie
Antoinette's stepehair, a Louis XV
I and two rare Nubian
dolli made entirely of tiny sheila,
INS.
New Loveliness For You
aa PAL.M0LIVE SOAP
Moeai rhis
V, Simple Bi-auty Plan
vw.i. saacaHM sa> laaasai s..P
sii-, hi. umiiudi) ha iaari
*" 1 hi. IniulnS m..-j(t l
>u. .kin Milk l-SfSSl
l-.i H.ns ,*..|'
GOES UP JUSTTHE SAME
LONDON.
Nationalized road transport in
Britain will cost 11) i*-i cant
luore from January 29
d ll.uil.ide Executive
said tha Increaas lo general haul-
ego nnd parcels ratal was nece*.
raaani heavy
in costs, particularly
I n^ igta and nat I
This l* the second increase
since the Industry was taken
Ovei in February 148. Haulage
;.nd parcels rater, went up by 71
; ar
ml i
19
t up by 7
-I.NH.
TltUMAN AND
PLEVEN AGREE
RECTOR OF ST. JOHN
Rev. A K. Simmons. Rector
of St. Lucy, has been appointed
: S-. .1, n, This wai
1 at a meeting of the Board
or Aprointmenl held in the lobby
f-f the House of Assembly yester-
day at 12.30 p.m.
0 I . I I
i: is pre iietad thai
between the United states and
France announced by Truman and
Pleven will neatly Infl
rbntgJI policy of all North
i powera.
In more formal times they
would i
fug da illiari
The : '-' i .if'.i-i" UK
Two -Duv Conference batwcei,
the President and the French
Minister goes far beyond
i.-lions and brood!v word
. ed statements of common objec
i rtves uniBlly made aftai Men
t;.!ks
Many diplomats her.- bestoved
it gives n clearer pletUTO of One
: | uilenttons of the tWO
statesmen, than etther had pvan
ontha
uilnk Franca
ippear* to !" anuniuu] type Ot
tnershlp with tha United
States, hitherto reserved to Eng-
lish speeJtlnf coutrti lei
It Is noted that the communique
.ontolns no hint of dis.i
,ver Far Kactcrn policy like th-1
.
month between President Truman
nd British Prime MinisU
Vth .
Reuter
Miners Defy
Government
SYDNEY, Jan. 31,
The Australian Mlnw I
lunell dc Lo defy Uie
rtnvernment": strike ban and hold
toppoges one day per week in th'
coal mines.
This step which follows
similar deci ion by miners at mast
la a protect against eon-
ditioru attached to the recent paj
ward.
The miners are liable to si*
months imprisonment or 100 fine
for ignoring the ban.
The Council also decided lo see
support for miners in
cities
A coal industry tribunal had
decided to makg 'he wage In-
creases of up to two A
pounds sterling conditioner on the
mid ra' working 10 lull days per
fortnight. The Government h.i
threatened ti use troops if miner*

than iso.ooo w
already idle in Sydney i
acute coal shortages and

'- are part of th"
mounting bidusb i i
Railwayman, dissatis-
fied with wage rates have placed
a ban on overiime and doeke/
are due to begin a similar ban ~'n
February 2.
druter.
The
above
equip-

BohSSa-aSrf
Bfail
'f 1'-...
Not I Hooch a Co
As from 1st February our
oj pOAOUiai sq RLM sseutsnq
No. 12 HIGH STREET
To mark the event we will
open attractive new stocks
and will be delighted to
welcome our old friends
in the new premises.

I

i'Al.l IU.I1I
IIARBADOS ADVOCATE
rHt'RSDAY, IKBRIARV 1. 1H1
CLYDE WALCOTl 4A
ALL-ROUND ATHLETE
By B.M.
TOE KAMB -tt, now faini.i..r wherever 1 >.-
I cricket is played once rang to the echo within
. the old school, jus! ;( itom 'in the
ancient ntj chunrh of Si M
Km i\ m ai Ihis little walled
1 en Mnson Hall 9traat, with
il' liny pi
Mi ''hat and hall."' mod-
est beginning tor one li <
doughty deeds with the bat, and
bfhind the Mumps have thrilled
la, at poinu as far apai:
rtown iind Calrutt.-i. Lon-
don and Knit
Dul Clyde is no, onjy a rrirk-
Whattar W
o,i;sundinti ubiliiy, and hu rep-
resented the colony on moie IhM
one occasion. And he Is versatile
too. He is as much nt home in the
full back line where hu powerful
kick means so much to the de-
fence, as he is in the front line
goal from the right wing. Speed
and accuracy arc his two main
N't what else ran he re-
quired of a first class footballer'
M.C.C. Defeat
S. Australia
From a spot in the Empire
10,000 miles from Buckingham
Palace comes this story oZ
heroism and Its reward
Vo Red Rats Means Peace
LONDON.
Robert iortr an I
writer, has just returned from a
ftui-nicnth stay wiCi the Skolt
Lapn in the Arctic Circle wild
good news for the superstitious.
The Skulls told him thai there
ill be peace in Europe for three
IB, though there will be
v ars 'far away." They said they
* this because of the signs of
WOMAN BEATS JUNGLE TO AID
WOUNDED HUNTER
Knim HAROLD DALE
MAS
art
i
ADELAIDE .'an 31.
I.C.C tourioj
beat Smiih Australia
Just 25
But to return lo the lad, Clyde
I .fly KtifUtM Hi- v..,.
25 years old u fortnight ago as he
was born on January 17, 1926.
almost at the moment the M.C.C.
cricketers under Hon. F G Cal-
ihorpc were trying conclusions
(ISA and 1.13) Ml 151 w"h our hmsui Kensington HU
rims. Tl, .-. rii.nk Walmtf. engineer of
reuive I .xth vie- ,ne Advocate Printing Plant, was
toiy ..f UW UHlf uuludiiiB four ot of a cricketer himself. Frank
In llrst rtaaa riK-kcl w*s i 'P*u,,r member of the Em-
rnsjtehes. P""* 1st XI for some years and a
! also their second win -nUeanue ol players like H, C
HI South Auslr.-ilin who pro- 'inflllh. who captained the team,
the tourlfll with then 8r*1 E A Martindnle. C I) Spoontr
Class win lust October. and E. A V. Williamsall
The victory should put the tMoi aouaahold names in cricket clr-
In good heart for the Fourth Test dM i
which opens on this same Ade- Indies
latde ground on Frld.
SYDNEY,
L'KOAI a waJtssfvag, rain-waked jungle of Australia thi
story of a woman's heroism seeped 1(1,000 miles arros.
Ihe world until it reached the King, at BuckiiiRham Palace. gJjJgJ
Thi story blfU with Ted Foster, a crocodile hunler, hack-
in his .> ihrmu-h the jungle towards the Wearynn River
in the Northern Territory.
Ha (looped to aquuTn through an entangling vine, and
iid rifle went off He was badly wounded.
Fosters black tracker made him comfortable -and be-
gan to run.
At the river
'
cock, fainting with exhaustion
landing ground cut hi W urged tier two boys lo the task
" of battling through the jungl.
prewth for ten terrible miles to
where Foster lay.
need ..
juiwiit And at that man
Oil' the story of Foster-
nonsoon broke w"n a r0*r-
Heatiicock did not h"si-
alone except for
wo black boys and their pr
iched dim on the sixth
day after the accident. The tough
hunter was still alive. With their
but
with
Hi vi
a hollowed tree trunk in itrcniith the woman and the
craft she
hem down the McArthur
boiling and flooding under The plai
two boys began to hack a clcari
for the Flying Doctor's pla
th
The log canoe shot bobbing and
I .
U ': -
died
. as promised, but
heard its engirt
In 1938, the Skulls said theio
would be war the following year
because the reindeer was shedding
its coat in the wrong season.
Said Crottet:
Their predictions are more re-
liable than those of some news-
papers.
"Their prediction bM
I of peace, lot
was based on the fsct that there
was a marked absence of red
rata." I.M.t,
In deck-chair on the veranda of her home, 60 miles Sffda- 'rJv
way, nt ftfn ltuth He.-uhcock, fingering some xewiru-.
Her mounteo j..,ii. im,.ii nut-
hand was away on patrol, and trail; Me fell at liei Met panting
Hi luock contacted
erUft> Around her the jungle | Flying Doctor service on her
ibla radio trni
i i:asi>ini uu th.
Mi- ll-ali. in k\ stor> has be-
come uu epic in the "oat-back."
It happened nine >es.- i%a So
f.arpmg up
nitte.
Flying Doctor replied:
mouth
:Bio the Mormy waters of tbe
tSnlf of Carpentaria, and for the ..
1**1 three days and three night* .why tell It
Wm two hliicks and the white
woman, soaked and battered by Two Fridays back Mr>. Heath-
sea and weather, paddled and rock received a aMiei silt medal
baled Their tree trunk to the maklni her j new M B F. for
"I II Wearyan River. her gallantry.L.E.S.
Regatta On
Saturday
In .. camparatlvetj low scoring
game the MCC held tr i
throughout and the
needing IBU to save defeat ol the
beginning of play this morning
with six wickets in hand never
looked like getting them and were
all out 153 ruin- short of victor)
The :cores :
hCC I-'. Ii.mi.s* BsWJI
M.C.C J.n1 InrU'.SS ......
8 Aii'tr >il,i ill
p. Anal ngv
: |
Danrtr Hulton ii w, i*m
Ptfeh c fl. b Writ...

rlfr l> Wriglil
MKrt.*! IU. 8lMhi.t
Sjrl I) Oiy.i,
'--, h Ti.o-
NnbHf ' Hollm
Uilmi *i!n-i>|..ii.l i. Il.,:.i.-
1 out
Bolrai 11 bvr 1 left, 4 no tLI.
The thinl regatta
and beyond the West *ehting Season taka
. 'In
_, lbr Royal Uaibadcs Yacht Club.
Kid Brother Handicaps and starting times
, are as follows;
ao Clyde started, at least in an
atmosphere where cricket was not c," No Vsehi
unknown, and right from the ~
'i.iri ins most serious rival was p 1,1 M-,t
bU .1 1.1 brother Keith. Whether * OfeM
the lawn, or at school. Keith,
Start in rut
Hfd
rail ol MMhMi I lor SS. 1 tot
tor Ss. t lor ;cm 1 r. ia. (or
for HI. B f..r 147. 0 fp. IS]
UOWI.IVCj ANALYSIS
0 m a
atathsni s .1 ii
1 o I
i a
Wrl*nt II I V
4 U I
BOXING CHAMPS
RETURN HOME
LONDON. Jan. 31.
Tour British boxing champions
Jack Gardner, heavyweight;
bigger and stronger was always
Clyde's most serious opponent.
a* I'-ut Clyde was never leant to trv
" conclusions wnh him whenever
M the opporiunity offered
4ii Prom St Miir>'s el.-mentaiv
* school they went on to Comber-
mere, and [inullv to Harrison
i^ College where both boys sbOSM m
athletics Keith nabbed the 100
,J yds. sprint record before his
3 school days were over and gamed
t a reputation as a hard hitting
T batsman which has hardlv dimin-
|M ished-
It was Clyde's style, however,
I a which attracted attention Of a
pnewhal slimmer DUlld thnn
Keith. Clyde adopted a more up-
right stance at the wicket, and
' this enhanced his naturally long
I reach Today he stands over 6 ft.,
a and still there is no evidence of a
i crouch in his batting style
1 At College Keith started tho
century making habit, and Clyde
was not slow in following his ex-
ample.
Scored IKS
III Y>ll
l
o Earn.
F.inlMy
lnfld>.
Moans
R ''I.....I
.-.: truM
141 Y-lU.w
1

. I.
mainstay Of the Army attack, hu;
the boys showed scant courtesy lo
us. Clyde hit fast bowk. Harold
Blackm.in straight overhead for
and again, and revelled
In nuking 185 'Boogies" got 100,
and altogether the school ended
up close lo 400. with wickets in
hand This was about 1942 and
Clyde his not yet lost the habit of
hitting fixes off any kind of
bowling.
Island Player
lie also r.tuck 180 on the Wan-
derers score board at the Bay. and
14S Yellow
JIl T)M >.! PaaaUa *ul be held .
lurday Itth hbniMv 19*1
it i'imii BAXNurnai
atatts*.
tralian, as o

I of the finest wicket
n m the world.
retiring, and there '
KetirhiR
Shll ba is xomewhat ind
whs aoma hft-
Iha i Irela of
ilv and friends
new.op.ipei it'poit fiom Indm
bowed Clyda gdrlrnailni ,i Synod.
in privata Ufa Clyde is In the
Insurance business, but in | (M
menthl will k up to England to
play the game he lo
for his living.
had his first call to do d.ty for the ., ... _bl
island in 1942 while slill at school.
I accompanied that team, H\1 by
T N Peirce to Trinidad and one
of the things 1 well remember
about Civile wns his nervousness.
as he went in lo bat. It was his
birthday, and we had all wished
him luck at the hotel, and before
the game started. Bui it was Lance
Pierre who gave him his first hp has been engaged bv one ot
lPKC8*!!!~i,V"KV .p ," bowlSd 'he Lmncaah i ubs, and
the youngster before he could wilUhei.-fm.- m,n a band of Bar-
siait. and then later, apologised In badlan and Waal Indian cricketera
a way. for doing it Hut it was Ahll,, ,. ,,,,. Kr.ink Worrell
all g.Hi lun Three years later gverton Vaakaa, Oeorga Headley.
Clyde got 314 against rritUded i A kCartrndale, and nti
end against the same Pierre. All Auatrallani and Ii
in ii;
gaiM Ha playad lot tha W I In Ha nrUI taka wtth nun Ina baal
1948. and got too m his ni.i Ki,m,. wWiei ol at levi
against ihc MCC. And then on Ul thata parta, Who Uka in* self I
to India. look forward to great tab ]
He h.n. cored, centuries and this uie. tug-hearted etlcaete*
double centimes wdh aaM and against the Australians in Austra-
graee. and today ha is brtcketed lia, and later against tha llldlanl
with Don Tnllon. the great Aus- t Kensington.
AfrlceUi Foolhull
HasMagfr Elixir
W i(h Widh Doctor
DURBAN. South Africa.
I bl most important member ol
Durban's 12-man African football
ii never kicks the ball. He U
witch-doctor or "Unyanga.'
upon whose "mtnkati" (magic)
depends the outcome of every
match.
The witch-doctor is paid a re-
taining fee of CIO tn 12 a month
id if you watch a football flcld
i < dark night before an im-
portant league match you will nee
am aarnlng his keep with 'he
surreptitious making < ( th
o | ikatt
ow's horn carried at his
bell, he smears the goal-posts and
crossbar with "umuti" (medicine)
| eptng across the field to
distribute strange urtlcles.
le has already smeared the
boots and togs of the players witli
umuti. and on the day of the
match he will treat the let- ,A
each member of the team.
Ball Oets It Too
By some means he will manate
to have the ball in his posses
before the gamelong enough 10
practise his sorcery. i
On the day of the match sup-'
porters of the opposing teams lake
their beats, keeping well clear of
rival supporters for fear of a spell i
being cast on them lo make thn-
team lose.
The Bra* team runs on to Urn
leld anxiously watching the
ground for evidence ul irtakoti i
The nppnalnJ. team enters from
another point, taking core not lo
iread on the ground over which
bad .s have walked. The.-'
might l>e contaminated by witch-
craft, which will cause their skill I
to deteriorate.
The star player of the home
team makaa u valiant sally to th-?
visitors' goal but misses by a bare
inch. "Mtakati." the home sup-
portem howl despondently.
Ami when the game Is lost, it
is not the skiM or the team thai la
.
visitors' Unyanga that won the .
the game.**
FOOTBALL
IN U.K.
LONDON. Jan. 31.
The results of the F A. C. fourth
iMind replay were as follows I
.Manslield Town 2. Sheffield
Cnited I. after extra time Mans-
field are now away to Blackpool,
and Chelsea at home to Fulham
In the fifth round on Februa-y 10.
The results of League ihree.
Southern, were:
Bristol Rover; 1, Torquay United
Southern United 1. Bristol Cilv
Leagua Three Northern:
S'.Kikport County 5. Gatcshead
2 i;. m.
STANDARD BRIDGE
By M. Harrison-Cray
Dealer : South
NurlliSwulh (Lime
tie a a
i, ft
w. p.
*f A K 9 ; s
Kin 11 vi..
JA II k :
QB3 l i i i
s.
* ii 11 ;
W"
? oiiscrvc a stan-
i: '. 6n~l
and Soutii Two Diamonds
Nonh u'iid n.ure sensed
IHC oosaib:li:> nl a ruDi and
t pa.ts *ouid op b .v vc nio'i
in.~e ro D:amnncL> loo*ed
ike a :d:eraoe .ontrart
But lie fs
will must be r-ld and l,:v
two spade* a> doubled u/
East When this came round
to North hr tried to escape
into Tlire- Diamond- which
* doubled uv wiH
Re)ecting Mir leaa ol J.
gj in" urunipj wars no good
tor onr-ruTing purposes
Wr-: ra in order u>
I
three quicK rou
uumps held South to *ix ,
'rirft* lui k guile unneccs- c
smrv penally of too
Lap-Do Killrr
DUNDEE. South Africa
F Wellman told a meeting of
farmers here that a Pekinese l.;i
Leon known to kill a sheep The
so-called lap-dog attacks !ik> u
jackal, worrying and harrying a
Sheep, not like a dog; which jump*
and bites", he said.C.P.
The Weather
TO-D4.Y
Sun Rises: 6 IS a.m.
Sun Srts: 6 00 p m
Mi 11 n i New I February C
Lighting: 6.30 p.m.
High Halt.-: 1109 am
1KSTF.RDAY
Rainfall (Codrington) Jl in.
Trial for Month to Yester-
day: 2.67 Ins.
Temperature (Max.l SI | F.
Temperature Mm ISA' F.
Wind Direction (9 a.m I F:
.1 p.in. im:
Hind Velocity: 12 mile* Bar
hour
Bai'tmeler (9 a in.) 29971:
(3 p.m.) 29.912.
DANCE
AT
THE BARBADOS
AQUATIC CU'B
(taeal and w..i- Mem
ben* only I
ON
SATURDAY. FEBRUARY
3rd. 9pm
Musle by 1IAHR> BAMesfJ
ter and his Orchestra
\.!mi-i..n to U.i I In,mm i
1 2 SI.3ns.
r lo pro-
iioidiiig
What's on Today
Fela De Kuh's Exhibition of
oil paintings and pencil
sketches at "The Pavilion'
Hastings, to 00 am
Advocate's l'hoto Exhibition
at li.itti.-h-. Museum in
a.m.
R. J MacLeod's Exhibition
of oil paintings at Barba-
dos Museum 10 am
Meetini (I SI Ml.hjel'.
Vestry, Parochial Build-
ings 2 p.m
Mobile Clnemi at Warnr.-s'
Pasture. Chrht Church. B
p.m
"Flaminx Frontier" Globe
Taaeafera
Til Gel By" Empire The-
aace.
"My Mild Irish Rose"
Bridgetown Plasa.
i...
I7or adies and Qents
/Ml
Moygashel
A Sp.ci.-il Crtaso rtiiiling Linn
llanl lor lighl Sports Wear
Smart Suill. 28 ins. wide
vd__ S3.a
&J
(a\c Shepherd ^L fo.. lid.
10. II, 12 & 13 Broad Si
I'WC
They'll Do It Every Time .... By Jimmy llatlo
"H)L,
i.Doze,-ruE Noisy nbswbor
UPSTAIRS, KNOWS WS RlSHTS-NOBOOy
CM TELL HIM WHERE TO GET OPF-
LOOK,F34L \-/LlSTEN,BtUENOSe-)
I 0OUT WANT J \ WHE>J I WANT TO*
TO BE A dA8,\V
BUT IT'S 3A.M. \ IT IS,I'lL ASK YOU.'
AW WE'RE R'QNT/L NOW MAKE LIKE
- UNSeR YOU ,-/?{ A BREEZE XN'V
!i>> stow-..
But give / listen on tvie day
AFTER ONE OF HIS ^LL-rMlQMT
80JTS WHEN HE WANTS SHUT-EyE
, CANT A MAN SLEEP A LITTLE^
/ LATE ONE MORNING WITHOUT I
I xir kids bansing on plates, A^-
'-. BOUNCING BALLS AND
?AIS'NG A RUCTION?^ I
WARNING VOU I'LL
CALL THE COPS!! ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
THE PUBLIC are asked lo note thai the business
formerly carried on by RADIO l)|STKIBi:T10N
(BARBADOS) LTD. will from the date of this
Notice be carried on by
BARBADOS REDIFFUS10N SERVICE ETD.
There will be no change in ihe Office ot the Company
which iilso ctntinues under the same Management.

i'Al.l IU.I1I IIARBADOS ADVOCATE rHt'RSDAY, IKBRIARV 1. 1H1 CLYDE WALCOTl 4A ALL-ROUND ATHLETE By B.M. TOE KAMB -tt, now faini.i..r wherever 1 >.I cricket is played once rang to the echo within the old school, jus! ;( itom 'in the ancient ntj chunrh of Si M % Km i\ m ai Ihis little walled 1 en Mnson Hall 9traat, with il' liny pi Mi ''hat and hall."' % modest beginning tor one li  % ihrmu-h the jungle towards the Wearynn River in the Northern Territory. HA (looped to aquuTn through an entangling vine, and % iid rifle went off He was badly wounded. Fosters black tracker made him comfortable -and began to run. At the river % cock, fainting with exhaustion landing ground cut HI W urged tier two boys lo the task of battling through the jungl. prewth for ten terrible miles to where Foster lay. need .. juiwiit And at that man Oil' the story of Fosternonsoon broke w n a r0 r Heatiicock did not h"sialone except for wo black boys and their pr % iched dim on the sixth day after the accident. The tough hunter was still alive. With their but with Hi vi a hollowed tree trunk in itrcniith the woman and the craft she hem down the McArthur boiling and flooding under The plai two boys began to hack a clcari for the Flying Doctor's pla th Around her the jungle | Flying Doctor service on her  ibla radio trni i i:asi>ini uu th. Mill-ali. in k\ stor> has become uu epic in the "oat-back." It happened nine >es.- i%a So f.arpmg up nitte. Flying Doctor replied: mouth :Bio the Mormy waters of tbe tSnlf of Carpentaria, and for the .. 1**1 three days and three night* .why tell It Wm two hliicks and the white woman, soaked and battered by Two Fridays back Mr>. Heathsea and weather, paddled and rock received a aMi ei silt medal baled Their tree trunk to the  maklni her J new M B F. for "I II Wearyan River. her gallantry.L.E.S. Regatta On Saturday In .. camparatlvetj low scoring game the MCC held tr i throughout and the needing IBU to save defeat ol the beginning of play this morning with six wickets in hand never looked like getting them and were all out 153 ruinshort of victor) The :cores : hCC I-'. Ii.mi.s* BsWJI M.C.C J.n1 InrU'.SS 8 Aii'tr >il,i ill p. Anal ngv : | Danrtr Hulton ii w, I*M Ptfeh c fl. b Writ... % % rlfr l> Wriglil MKrt.*! IU. 8lMhi. t Sjrl I) Oiy.i, '-% h Ti.oNnbHf % Hollm Uilmi % *i!n-i>|..ii.l i. Il.,:.i.1 out Bolrai 11 bvr 1 left, 4 no tLI. The thinl regatta 's el.-mentaiv school they went on to Comber!" mere, and [inullv to Harrison i^ College where both boys sbOSM m  athletics Keith nabbed the 100 ,J yds. sprint record before his 3 school days were over and gamed t a reputation as a hard hitting T batsman which has hardlv dimin|M ishedIt was Clyde's style, however, I a which attracted attention Of a pnewhal slimmer DUlld thnn Keith. Clyde adopted a more up right stance at the wicket, and this enhanced his naturally long I reach Today he stands over 6 ft., a and still there is no evidence of a i crouch in his batting style 1 At College Keith started tho century making habit, and Clyde was not slow in following his example. Scored IKS III Y>ll. Moans R ''I I .-.: % truM 141 Y-lU.w 1 % 1 well remember the occasion B when the Garrison Sports Cluti l Don Cockell. Iight-heavyweight; Volunteers of former dayscame c :h\: and In Ear I drubbing at the'hnnds of i< Tilll W. Thompson, lightweight the CoUega team which included f an London abpori todaj ,v Walcotl brothers, "Boogies" '" from Jthnnneshurg. They wore C B Williams, ami Bunnv ,-. aocompanied by Las Alien, mid Smith. K dleweight from Hen worth. War"PUM" Pan IS and I funned the K % MJ BaM II Batwia %  Reutei tandard Canasta DISCARDING TO A FA02EH PILE t r M. HMkliQN C4V % [ % I ion on tn .' i. that your pnrtntt u he n l;0>oll me por* ii rvtT.Miit!\ se'tlni II To? % Iioutri thsrsfors % By doiiui oil tn i IU i 1 II nai. en-i HU no able to taa u > % tlirowim t all ot lour wi.e BSn* I tliai when roJ lie pa-.-k lie caunwi i - >ou r. & ind If all i.uii .! PaaaUa *ul be held lurday Itth hbniMv 19*1 it I'IMII BAXNurnai atatts*. tralian, as o % I of the finest wicket n m the world. retiring, and there KetirhiR Shll ba is xomewhat ind WHS aoma hftIha i Irela of ilv and friends new.op.ipei it'poit fiom Indm % bowed Clyda gdrlrnailni ,i Synod. in privata Ufa Clyde is In the Insurance business, but in | (M menthl will K up to England to play the game he loe contaminated by witchcraft, which will cause their skill I to deteriorate. The star player of the home team makaa u valiant sally to th-? visitors' goal but misses by a bare inch. "Mtakati." the home supportem howl despondently. Ami when the game Is lost, it is not the skiM or the team thai la . nl a RUDI and t pa.ts *ouid OP B .V vc nio'i in.~e ro D:amnncL> loo*ed ike a :d:eraoe .ontrart But lie fs will must be r-ld and l,:v two spade* a> doubled u/ East When this came round to North hr tried to escape into TlireDiamondwhich * doubled uv wiH Re)ecting Mir leaa ol J. gj in" urunipj wars no good tor onr-ruTing purposes Wr-: ra  in order u> I three quicK rou uumps held South to *ix 'rirft* lui K guile unneccsc smrv penally of too Lap-Do Killrr DUNDEE. South Africa F Wellman told a meeting of farmers here that a Pekinese l.;i Leon known to kill a sheep The so-called lap-dog attacks !ik> u jackal, worrying and harrying a Sheep, not like a dog; which jump* and bites", he said.C.P. The Weather TO-D4.Y Sun Rises: 6 IS a.m. Sun Srts: 6 00 p m Mi 11 n i New I February C Lighting: 6.30 p.m. High Halt.-: 1109 am 1KSTF.RDAY Rainfall (Codrington) Jl in. Trial for Month to Yesterday: 2.67 Ins. Temperature (Max.l SI | F. Temperature Mm  ISA' F. Wind Direction (9 a.m I F: .1 p.in. IM: Hind Velocity: 12 mile* Bar hour Bai'tmeler (9 a in.) 29971: (3 p.m.) 29.912. DANCE  AT  THE BARBADOS AQUATIC CU'B (taeal and w..iMem ben* only I  ON  SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 3rd. 9pm Musle by 1IAHR> BAMesfJ ter and his Orchestra \.!mi-i..n to U.i I In,mm i 1 2 SI.3ns. r lo proiioidiiig What's on Today Fela De Kuh's Exhibition of oil paintings and pencil sketches at "The Pavilion' Hastings, to 00 am Advocate's l'hoto Exhibition at li.itti.-h-. Museum in a.m. R. J MacLeod's Exhibition of oil paintings at Barbados Museum 10 am Meetini (I SI Ml.hjel'. Vestry, Parochial Buildings 2 p.m Mobile Clnemi at Warnr.-s' Pasture. Chrht Church. B p.m "Flaminx Frontier" Globe Taaeafera Til Gel By" Empire Theaace. "My Mild Irish Rose" Bridgetown Plasa. i. .. I7or £adies and Qents /Ml Moygashel A Sp.ci.-il Crtaso rtiiiling Linn llanl lor lighl Sports Wear Smart Suill. 28 ins. wide vd__ S3.a &J (a\c Shepherd ^L fo.. lid. 10. II, 12 & 13 Broad Si I'WC They'll Do It Every Time % . % ... By Jimmy llatlo "£H)L, i.Doze,-ruE Noisy NBSWBOR UPSTA IRS, KNOWS WS RlSHTS-NOBOOy CM TELL HIM WHERE TO GET OPFLOOK,F34L \-/LlSTEN,BtUENOSe-) I 0OUT WANT J \ WHE>J I WANT TO* TO BE A dA8,\V > stow-.. BUT GIVE / LISTEN ON TVIE DAY AFTER ONE OF HIS ^LL-rMlQMT 80JTS WHEN HE WANTS SHUT-EyE  CANT A MAN SLEEP A LITTLE^ / LATE ONE MORNING WITHOUT I I XIR KIDS BANSING ON PLATES, A^'-. BOUNCING BALLS AND ?AIS'NG A RUCTION?^ I WARNING VOU I'LL CALL THE COPS!! PU BLIC NOT ICE THE PUBLIC are asked lo note thai the business formerly carried on by RADIO l)|STKIBi:T10N (BARBADOS) LTD. will from the date of this Notice be carried on by BARBADOS REDIFFUS10N SERVICE ETD. There will be no change in ihe Office ot the Company which iilso ctntinues under the same Management. SllHT llll II OFF IHil.Y WITH ENRICHED BREAD The Vitamin Loaf .1 & It CHECK YOUR FACTORY SUPPLIES and Phone early for ihe foliowina DUNLOP TRANSMISSION BELTING 3Vi" x Tly DUNLOP RUIlHEIt 1NSERTIO.V %" & I-lfl" DICKS PACKINGS all Types UE1.T FASTENERS BELT DRESSING FIJVKK GRAPHITE STENCIL INK COTTON WASTE MASS DROOMS STEEL WIRE BRUSHES EMERY & SANDPAPER FILES All Types TAPS & DIES HACKSAWS & HACKSAW BLADES ENGINEER'S HAMMERS  OPEN END & BOX SPANNERS TAPER St STRAIGHT SHANK HIGH SPEED DRILLS 1-lb., l-lb. 11-lb.. ll-lb, 214-lb, 3-lb. STILLSON TYPE WRENCHES 8", 10", 14", 18", 24" 38" CHAIN PIPE WRENCHES *i"4" ECKSTEIN BROTHERS BA* SHEET ; % '-'-.''-'.'.'-'-'.'.'.'.'.'.-.-.--'.^--^'^^w'^v,'^-,^^'^','*'*--'*-*','*-,-,'.. S We ham \ir S/or* of... j Unitex Insulating Wallboard TERMITE-PROOF. 1 Ina. thick I n. wtda by ft. f Iti 10 tl: U It. lont ^ Standard Hardboard H Ina. thick: i ft. x 8fl: S u 10 ft. :/l> ui. thick < ft. x i ft 8 I Tileboard Cmtn, \\ bur and t.i. -n J 4 ft. x fl and 4 fl. x I ft PHONE *2tl. L 1LK1NSON & HAYNES Co., Lid. | ^ % ^^cerOoe pec ioocooo n n m ooeooeacoBooeo' \

PAGE 1

TIUKSDAY, FKMtl-ARY I. IMI BARBADOS ADVOCATE PAGE THREE Count Those 3 Bills With "Electric Eye" B ROBERT ( I.AltK WASHINGTON An economy-minded Tttuuiv ha* come up with % new i labour-savin*, devicesa machine io count old dollar'bills. Secretary Snyder has announced The development of ;in Electric Eye" counter to thumb Uiroueti the five million torn and tattered paper dollars that hare to bo retired daily. The Treasury will install 25 cr *ne machines to replace.,annual savins of (230.00080 amployres who now do the lob by hand. The machines each count moro '.nan 500 dollars a minute, eight nines as (M as the average employee. And they don't mind the smc'l. either. The Electric Eyes will take over inc job of checking the silver *T(iimit,. s that come into the Treasury for redemption alter banks decide they've outlived their usefulness. Federal Reserve Bonks hind KM old bills in bundles of 100 and cut them in hair, but the Treasury rechecks the count lust to make sure. The new machines, developed by the Buremi of Standards, reject packages that don't contain exactly 100 bills after count inn them by means of a light beam that actuates ;i photo-electric system. New money has been machinecounted for years, but until now no mechanical device had been able to keep an accurate count of bills that were wrinkled and doa fired The ..veraae life of % dollar Is about nine monthsand with more than a billion in circulation just replacing the old ones Is a big Job. Lost year alone. 1.138.588,540 dollar bills were sent in for redemption  nearly 25 million pounds ID nil Coins, formiiutt.lv. have a much . g~%  . > longer life span. The average life tlOW IjOVemillCnl \1 fil |1 [  I' -II III of the nearly one and a half biUlon !" ._,.. a WVU ** % J III dnllnrq worth ,\1 enin of all rvne*. THE HAGUE. Jan 29. ofwmW S bv tte iuW c te Dr D s,lt,ker foreign MinisA mobile exhibit is showing the tn SO vJiiS ler I* ,he Dutch Coalition Cabinet latest developments In faun and which resigned last week, v.a home research to farmers of a Total currency and coins in cirto-day sounding party leaders large agricultural area in the l'mculalion. in case you would like to seeking to form a new Governted States. The -Family Fanning* know whether you've got your nient. ... exhibit, as it is called, is being share, is about 27 billion dollars Wusen Juliana asked nun displayed in 3B counties (districts) $180 for every man, woman and horUy ?f or ? m dn '* h V. ,aB t night U i the State of South Dakota, child in the country ,0 "ivestieate the possibilities o, I.N.8. on "'n* n w Cabinet" though The display shows 1) important this was not a mandate to form phases of farm and farm-home % TaK and lmP">lnS Ihe larm home. alMlmc quarterly hih In the Ural P f, M '' n "£ 22£l2S^S2 Mod "'. craula, bulletin,, and d, s thr. monthaf.er th. Hart of the '"£'- i %JtZ~ r ' m > 0V plv help ,liu,.,e ,l, u l !" Korean Income for the period was reckoned by the Commerce Department at the rate of 244 billion dollars a year. The old quarterly high mark came In the last three months of 1948 and was at the rate of 231 billion dollars a year. WajBM and salaries made up Ihe biggest pan of the increase, which was seven per cent higher than tho previous 1930 quarter. Reuler that are led by expert local agriculture Grenade Thrown Among Dancers The exhibit was constructed bv farm, civic, and commercial groups interested in promoting more stable and prosperous farming; in their corrununities. No admission is charged, and in some communities (ret coffee and doughnuts are served by local SINGAPORE. Jan. 29. A hand grenade thrown into i The redance hall wounded British solrmm muneration for work alone hit the diers. the dance hoMess and civile rou P" A similar display in 194M annual rate or 155 billion dollars, inns. was se n bv 18,000 persons in 20 Corporation profits also oriThere were 25 casualties communities. ranged sharply amounting to 11 The incident occurred last nigh!. and one-half billion dollars beTne gn^ae wa s lobbed Into We fore taxes for the quarter a 25 . lrt f h iU EnTmAKr - Ver,hC rCV m,S Semiiic.£^fiJTwX ihree months. 0np BrMlltl Mldi r and nn Ernu 1'roiits after tnxes were 6,4 nil*>an woman were reported to o: Uon dollars, a 1.2 billion dollar *n a serious condition. 1IH reiisc over the previous nuar^_^__^_^__ t i fli.-piT,. the new excess profits tax which was made retroactive !> % ,1 !" 1?:1.a 'PI.* to July i. Kusia rights rlu The government pointed out that prollts Krtw faster than  LONDON. Jan. 29. sales during the period, with nn Soviet Health organisations increase in the profits-sale In All Forms The increasing use of various forms of fertilizers on United States farms has caused NrttUsw i quipmci.i to become the most diversified of any type of farm machinery. This is reported by the United States Department of Agriculture. Fertilizer equipment ranges auto taking special measures to fight the f rom arna ||. hand-operated d-from nine to 9.8 per cent. mftuensa epidemic in Russia. Mosvices to tractor units, sclfPront* increased most sharply cow rad 0 **' d today. unloading trucks, and aircraft m-arh 40 per centon non-durable ,,J"f J* !" ," l ap ^! 1 1 .;,'!,'.!"""' major industries" It means a!, the ability to insure "the delivery of all kinds of products when at where needed." The present record VS. pr> duction is the result of an unprecedented growth during the past live years. Petroleum companies have "worked diligently to modernize and expand, and to Increase raw material reserves in order to .nsure capacity to serve an expanding economy," the Tribune fates. "During these and previous years efforts have been unremitting to improve the quality oi products and to develop new products, uses, and processes." Domestic capacity to produce ciude petroleum has been creased by S5 per cent, while lenniiig capacity has been landed by 25 to 30 per cent. In srtdittan. large syMems of pipe lines nave been laid, tankei lloets. have been enlarged a nd Modernized, and consumer outlets expanded and improved. Despite the record U S. production of petroleum, the Nation is not yet using Its refineries to full capacity, taya the Tribune. It Is estimated that from TiO.000 10 1.000.000 additional barrels cdiild be produced, it they are reeded, without damaging the h'espan of the well* A Real Swot (By HOWARD BEftRY) LONDON KORTYFIVE-YEAR-OLI) Sidni i Rirhard Daly, chief anitar> in pec tor ol llford. Essex County, nukes a hobby of winning a aemlc distinctions. His latest and seventeenth s cess was winning a law examination which qualified him practise as an attorney if wished. Claiming Io have a photographic memory and never to forgot, Daly studies at night and weeklies. For years he has been getting through at least one pace text book weekly and ho never takes a note. Daly has become . its-, has won three Liverpool University diplomas in hygiene, a Uindon University diploma in Public Admin istrulion, and a number awards in town-planning, i estate management and meat trade technique. "Some people think I am crazy to go on collecting degrees at my age." said Daly, "but I prefer to learn rather than lumber up my mind with books that are nol really entertaining Daly studies with Bach or Beethoven playing on the radio. "I find I need good classical music,' he said. "I swot better with the radio on." Now Daly is toying with the Idea of studying tor a It A. degree In French and Norwegian. Rut there is at least two blind spots In Daly's remarkable powers of memory He forgets names. "I often have to apologize to people for that." he said And his 16-year-old daughter. Olgs. said "Daddy often forgets my pocketmoney." I,N.S. of policy that would involve assistthey therefore prove useless as fertilizers, but also places i _ % *_ i -* -_ % %

PAGE 1

PACE FOUR BARBADOS ADVOCATE TIIVRRDAV. FEBRIARV 1. 1M1 BAKBADOS M WUmi Priato4 kv   i li. r>. 1 ir, i \< l\4. ISM I s I DURING the debate in the Legislative Council on the bill to provide for the Registration of voters Hon. Dr. Cato in a maiden speech pointed out a situation which will inevitably arise and which Will have lo be remedied under the Representation of the People Act. He Hid that II was not fair to retain a system under which a few people in a district had the right to elect a similar number of representatives as a district with a large number of voters. The question of proportional representation is one which must i>c considered in view of the changes which will arise in future. The passing of the adult bill has already given rise to many complicated issues which come with the changing of any electoral machinery. It has already been suggested that the representation in the House of Assembly he changed by means of a re-allocation of seats, ft was then argued that if parishes like St. Joseph and St. James had the right to return two members lo the General Assembly, it was only fair that ptftlfaw like St. Michael and Christ Church should be allowed a greater number. The answer given to this was the suggestion of single member constituencies. By this means the parishes would be divided into wards each entitled IJ return one member. If this had been carried out it might have been possible to have divided the larger parishes into a greater number of wards so that they would have returned more members to the House than the smaller parishes. Dr. Cato now comes to the point and reminds the Government that sooner or later the issue will have to be faced and proportional representation given. It may be that in the next amendment to the Representation of the People Act provision could be made for an increase of the membership of the House from 24 to 30 members so that the additional seats could be allocated to those constituencies with high population figures. As an alternative it might be possible tn use the figures now being collected for registration purposes, so that u specified number of areas of 450 voters each could be used as a unit for representation. Consideration should be given now to the matter so that the issue can be faced at the earliest opportunity. WATER THE question of the necessity for one or two rigs for the Waterworks Department was raised by Hon. F. C. Hutson during the debate in the Legislative Council on a resolution to provide the necessary funds. In this island the mattersaffecting the improvement of the water system have been entrusted to a Board ot which Mr. Hutson is a member and his point now leaves the public wondering what the discussion is about. While it is recognised that the detailed expert engineering knowledge necessary for dealing with the island's water supply cannot be expected from the average voter, it is surprising that in an island where water is the prime mover in agriculture that the public knows so little about water improvements intended, i Can it be that too little use is made of the public Press to disseminate knowledge affecting agriculture? Our llradi is S.i* A Pomibl>To The Editor, Tlie Advocate, SIR.Please Brant DM Opportunity to make u suggestion willi rejprd to the forthcoming Intercolonial cricket loumanv-nt. Judging from the number of bowlers invited to practice, one immediately realises that the selectors have grown conscious of the dreadful dearth of bowline talent in the Island. The two completed practice matchc* have Shown most of the bowlers to he equally innocuous. Our slow bowling department is undoubtedly very weak for Hoed, the best of the lot. Is indeed a problem. An Empire team is presently touring Gtenada and with it Is A. Holder a slow left arm spinner one who ratilb iptm the ball who Is spreading havoc amongst the Grenada batsmen. Having joined Empire only recently, Holder has not ha'l the opportunity the next trial match and giv< opportunity to prove his wortn. SPECTATOR. 30.1.51. Russia's A few Empire3 Will Take Canadian Plays To Bermuda '917% % % % % * lemnlj i l-enln lit) mil not Sltempt to % favour ot amis) and lo ope rli By DAVID J DALLIM I i>e of econoi xpanslonthe newest chapter in tnhutiiii MUM <>( the Ntl 1*5 historywas maiU. Leader tor the Comintern's "help" durum  Flam  three decades. Mosciw b Tiir. .Air. Urn niandoH $io,O00,0f"i ir financial assistance to the Bulgarian Communist party and .isststance lo Its leaders during % | : ly wa ..y on the The ILIUM amldl ,in. 1 i "' sl ,h ''" < oll ,u !" d ">"  h ll-HnS^. . % " % % % % %  Eastern % % ..I".;.satellites will be presented with ,' S, % I. an Wrieln "!' % !" lc rv,i, 11... u ,ilT'.iiVu considerable. When iho Soviet lea*-.ocrumUonnow In Its Bvernmcnt claims lhat Its SST^M a" to. !" ^r  1approximately lllth and. In some places. It. sixth reached Its prewar level, it |. rptaS country, """i?," no i mfl % *'*" U """ The third n...nnrf of er.,n..n,le 2? !" ""' " nl'o improve.1 1945. That Ihls tould bile thi m v. r ment i NKVT) does not in liir.-isn Trade. II I J 10 uld not %  rcparaUonswhich, from four "i>(cn while threr million nations, have aggregated $900.are kept In the army and a large ._ 000,000. Most of the reparations part of Russian industry is still ST.'.."-. : SSTL2 .reilta have pr^ldedI tSr ealcue^y with mlllUry produelion ha. ms to l>e made on the basis been due to these eight methods 1838 prices. Prices in the 0 f obtaining foreign assistance (in meantime have almost doubled, so addition lo UNRRA and Lend% thai tho 4000000000 i/nw to mat the sww.uw.uw grew'to a jeaBo) which were put into operaconsfdembly larger sum. In the ., j.._, u ...... _r?V .._ _.,,.. ,i , ,. ,.,,.. reparationsna paici 111,000.**** i M,i 1 "" *_ hc ; 000 lor "ntUUUou$430.000.(>0 cOBMmHC no. Er Ct !" i. C ml .iven '"' "connie.UoM," 1300.000.000 of Moscow Ihe am'"' "'" maintenance or Soviet share. Thl, !" £, I Com""!" %  % ""! ".nDO.0O0 U the dressed wind tolX. The mimbtr o thSe "' instalments of the reparations sometimes nives the imp. !" "~.. '"I Nichola. Il^hsc. ,, the soviet ha, almost at  , :i '.h^Tu,"i';"i,.h"-"'i'S8 Kir  M T le ST&r r '" .tance, that o, the Brltl ffi ^, ". ^V-JTMB E '-"' "'.'""'? " >" i mod.. l!;:m " K ."frTnar.ce.' n ,, *" d !" T VVr'' K""5 .M, t ,.",o \:.TaSo, % " .intain nw .ban 3 0110 ( ,.,,.,.. |i,. lt repsa-mUcm % s !" "' "> ingenious Busslan advisers and orli.lal..  avn .,. llls lav ,. amounlad lo sixty methods of aequirmu foreign Throiiehoul Eastern Europe, ceiliU||iin ,,,]..,. hls ,. ^ ,. x wealthnamely, pine war booty many, and the I amtrated ho.vcvci and grabbing bv (onewill have than 100.000 .re necessary to t0 be relinquished ..,on. Reparaoraanue (seneral slorfs anu check Fourth, new trade agreements tions payments will end. loo. on nei ", % £22 'le'wecn Russia and the satellites what will remain are. first. Soviet [Ore*, and mushrooming secrei havc ^.n, bccn b  d on Ihe vested Interests in other eol.n're. "" Am,., leu dollar a. the stable cur_, canllll sum a , i Z V rancj. The proeeai of tr.,slatil hich ennrlot eve K 2 n ,l ,ench rattoctlvlimUotl of agrleullhc Inflated currencies into d.>lla,s 1!S TSEaaW. f. ." ^ e. to HV. .tiiclion, .. . ,,,, , r eeonl ; | !" "*^ rol % !" n iioii." ..ml .lelght of m0 lnl r 7'"7 hroker beoperate numel hand In Huniary, for instance, tween Cast and West: and third, naliios" for  ned sometimes at ,hr ability to exert pressure to men! to ,"|i-' with tho tasks of || .60 liller and sometimes at 25 00. raise prices nn lb* products and i.. re occupation Is depending on which amount haplo lower Ihe prices on its pu Ltlll In forea; ''Hi to pert' in. % jiens lo hc more advantageous. chases. multitude ol other function. Fif'.h. the MVT has sometimes If Imperialism Is really what a.a__ . kind ot bou 1 Pioilucts from lhc satelI.cnin deflnnl it lo be-if Its mam Russi.. ntcs al a low price and resold trail, are interests abroad, capital l^nW.meimu^lnl4ir !" oi |i|Cm l0 , ,,, a targe investments, profits on  large K | .^.'iS """ % '" l ll-'ughl-in'arrangement !" £ B-'^ !" '" "" , the Ml.II (heir to Ihe , |h( MVT (n Mlw(nv Thc ship with Ihe nations of its orbit GPU and NKYlli. ami often PromM slnkln0 ln tance of such clearly falls within this definition contact with ihe KJJI |rad( ,.,!, wa lhc ,| c t nut the process of "partition 01 population, they "really enyw CMC hoalovaMa of Bulgarian zinc ' world" among the olhei their robot Soviet !" lonlxer concentrate; Bulgaria tried lo nepowers has been rev. rsed In the , countries wl.ich to thim are w (h" !" "* price of U4 a ton: M.c...., .tepemergerl. While Western ,m^ m ,mXhe' n.dlves": l* d .n00 dlnura. ami his agreed to have often been e-onomlc enijiire-huilding. in thi deputy 16,000; i director of impfavourable to the Soviet side and West they consist.-.! i a % teadllj piles received 25.000, n chief unfavourable to Ihe satellite. I'oirrowinK export of goods and lit ic 22.000. a department ] ;il ,d t f r example, has been sellinvestments: capita) abroad wa' Chlf 22.000 ( A VUfOIWV minis, n g mal to Russia nnd buying colaccumulated in the course of vear' iry wai 12.000 dinars a ton from her; in these transactions jtnd decades. The S. .. month.) 1" addJUoO, the Kussmn t |,e price ol coal has been lower ment. on the other hand hat not furiiishecl nnd the price of cotton higher l-een busy with forc-lsr. investment viii i 1 wW" % l,M "' u ">;.ii..y i' NTownw thmuiih (-31.WHMo 40.0H0 dinars a month n | n [n ftlU MM &eMeetl0D nlwut sh err rmlitarv foreeand DoSSS from the Yugoslav government, {io.000.00u. Bulgarian rose oil pow  """' f '" fl a Po'"cn' dinars a month. aviation oil has lieen delivered lo methods of ftnulre-hmldirii! Be In emit  lew instances are saln,rta at a price of seven cents a ,..,,,. ,,. h ','.', ."",. ' STSSIS ^S JS&Jttl 1-sher^a^ E^ £1,^^ ., the .or. Iml many other considered normal beESuimJSSb e, f el^~ST l,n rnethOOS, some IrtVlJl nnd old. rnmcnt. For the loan wria i.,,?h' ve v. ke^tatie a.^A eoHeetlng % C,e"ch,,,ovgl. for Instance. Evcteen"."iteVfacl^in'Tht'peS". hoot.'K been e !" nded S I.I Percent was charged, whereas war strengthening of the Soviet '. % .'..'"I" ,.J".... .ml shins as the Export-Import Bank rale was Union. END. war r aibrace factories an. ships as .:. ..it'le. tolling slock. 2.5 percent. i JAMEW BlIIIIIEtHr. O. II. Uaveerj 1887-IJK.I WHEN nernar.l BhlW died recentlv it was "James Bridle" Who teok hi phi rking In Brilein, ii.. deeft I 8 l with bl their fni). Ut -i sore |OM .t letter! and to the theatre. Osborne Kei ear, C B.B-i L.L.D., M.D., was the outstandr  ill during I % ; .n group % Robert London found Mimulatm which iirmiv ed nnd lh'> n ; by some as his finest piny; and of coarse "Daphne l-aureola" i controversy ninong the critics when it appeared In i49, nut the public bed no doubt iboul r gboul Den I Edith Evans brilliant ereetlon ot ''Daphne'' end ta wcclM. running for one year to full houses Many diwerning people, mclud ng I believe that some of his finest writing Is to IKfound in playi not yet Londonof "John Knox" duced in Glasgow! and "Tho Queen's Comedy". The Snal ept i ttter pley, which wea I99Q BcUnbusWh Fcstiv.ii. i. remeric a bl< for it; IntenMty of feelun.'. Ill humanity, and its crafl why Bridle's death Li .it his ngc ha r^t j II (trowing intellectually and n'tie. stn| ID % % er as a playwrianl 't i % Impoaalble to foreceat what hii poeition wu tinally be, but two thutaa maj ii-' noted. not the bt| 11 ti ksn luccaaaea enlv, but numb) la knownhave :i inplaee In the % Ciel theettee eH over the country. more and more Wl I nil plays reed for B 17 Hrtis: ns well as a stage craftsman, He thought ih.it London's domwas unhealthy, and some i i took the If found IOW Citizens' Theatre, which under hm ihair% nanehip has become tbe leading "i-epcrtory" tlu?atre In Britain To :inha nve uitatlnted time. thought and work, and % sneroui upport; nnd he used it for the encouragement of young writers and players Not n few of then will llwaya thank llrldie for Ii' kindly and wise advice and criticism and for "Citizens" he rrabt The Forrignn Reel" and Other litfbt pieces which give rein to that humour which shines out in h'l autobiography 'One Way Of LiVine" and in "Mr, Bridie's Alphabet for Little Glasgow Highbrows" and "Tedious and l,i fer It Is difficult for nnc who Ml friendih'p to write moderately of his persOfl qualtUei He was the kindliest .in I i' ions of men. and the host of good company with a salty wit, an unprediclabii' wmtl liresistible sense of fun and of the Incongmousth's Rive* MWOtUr to even nil most serious plays^and thai balk simplicity and delight in .simple things which ao often marks the reiilly fine mind. His passing Is an irreparable loss to B host of tnends in all walks of life, and of course parti, iilarly In the theatre and the world of letters. I believe that "Tobias and the Angel" resulted fr. should write a play about "a really lovable < 'laracter" and in the i\pochr\pha he found old Tobit. That phrase RDpl

PAGE 1

TIIIRSDAY. FEBRIWRV 1, 1951 RARBVIXI* ADVOCATE PAGE FIVE Lady Baby Savage Visits St. Margaret's Welfare Clinic Lady Savage, wife i.f Hi-; Excellency ihe Governo panied by their daughter. Miss Pat Savago and % Arne. Social Welfare Officer, paid a visit to trje St. Margaret's Branch of the St. John's Baby Wtlfaic Clink day evening. 150 Baptised O NF III NltKH) AND FIFTY converts were baptised the New Testament God held their second Bapf Ceremony yesterday. At the first which was held at Brandon*! Beach on Sunday morning ovei 300 were baptised. This second one was held at the back of Rev. Winter's home, "Winslnw", Fontabelle. The ceremony began at 8 o'clock, but from early In the momlnr people began to gather. They came from all over the island. Rev. James B. Reesor, the faith healer, was one of the baptists. On Sunday night 168 people were received into the Church of God and on Tuesday night over 100. Approximately 2,800 people nave been converted throughout the Convention and many more hundreds, who could not get into the Queen's Park Shed, raised their hands signifying their intention to live for Christ. Rev. Heesor, after nbout two weeks in the island, left (Ml morning for San Juan. Puerto Rico. L ARGE QIWTiTIKS of flying fish and dolphin are definitely on the western coast of the island Just waiting to be caught. Mr. D. W. Wiles, Fisheries Ofllcer told the Advor.il* On Tuesday 3.800 pounds of! the ladies on the iplendld flying flsh and 535 pounds of dol-, thev we doing Tliicl pltin passed through the Public Market and fairly good nalnhai I brought in along QM Paynes AJ1 '.lue .".rule (omphmenCarit? .tors' Book at the end of % I inch Of the i 15 children on the roll. About tw I accompanied by Iheir parents, and some by their *imll I" % a is the habit in QM country parishes where many ave to be out working all day. The clinic is always open on i 'Mings, so Lad. "V li.iwork that is done by the regular helpers One help.. big rnilk and other item Another wai weighing I a third WH recording: iln on forms prepared for tfc A fourth helper% trained nurse was checking up on the babies' fixing navel bands, giving advice about feeding, etc. Lady Savane looked on with interest at this form of Social Walfara Week thai | % aimed at helping the iteople of V % raise sturdier children. ratAef than to follow Iheir own methods which may be described as a cateh.-as-e.ilth-van wi. infant mortality. Th.. Clinic was founded by Madame Iiill on June 18 Visimrs' Impressions La I SeVUa ".rote IN the Vistors Book \ (sited 0 clinic with Miss Arne. I am most | d, end do c< igratulate Bay coast. During last boat brought i Oistins. On another boat veek one fishing i 48 dolphins Tuesday night ight 42 and wen organiaed, Ifouu i dren were happj work being done. wi'-h tho clinic evei-> -n...-^ \!i % S ivagc wrOUi "This is | very weU organiaed and well run clinic." MissAr-ie's contribution was: "Visited todav with Lad S IX AND A HALF acres of flrst r % % much lrnuresse.t crop ripe canes were burnt ,|U ' : K busmchke atmosphere and the quiet competence of the helpers. The babies on the ivholo seemed fitter than othen 1 1 % -i elaewhan Lady Savage waa presentci with % iquet at the end of I Another week-end 11 ie at Step-. Among those Drawn) were ney Plantation. St. George des, Rcvd A. Mellor Vicar of St Martroyed a quantity of second crop naret'sand Mrs Mellor; Madame brought them to the'Careenage. 2IX AND A HALF acres of first crop ripe canes were burnt .vhen a fire broke out at I.\. goes to me. Several Guesses Although no one guessed correctly, then wai no shortage oi answers Ionian the Editor began day, % r> few of i me of the gliesse*. "The Rum I A Reft% % i Party at Hotel in honour of 'he Crleketen I nt of Ibis picture I taaty heverafte,** "Seine ha me hasn't," ate. Tins week's | turn wai laMfl at SeaarelL Pan < i Ov p-x nt th' T c A 'plane* which called here everv Saturday change ear at Rari.ditore him yeaterday on i el % IIIR the sum of $6,000 I brcy Birch Director of the Pro gressive Motor Bus Co D vreil Road, without a reasonable cause and using threats against him. The offence wai Mleeed to have been commlUed i ii January 23 Mr. V.. Harrow Is uppenhng on behalf of Pultin while Capt. K Orani is proaacuting, from information received, for the Police. Yesterday when th'ary evidence was stan Prosecution called on two witnesses. CANBERI.A. Jan. 31 Before Mr. Talma remanded Negotiations between Britain Puttin there was a queMi Ula fir n 15-year meat rhether bail should be gnntod LONDON Jan. 31. Britain may buy meat from I bad In UM Commons todaj % aid h(i waa looking hkto the ihera could any neRoliations the Govcrn% could bo imixirted from Germany without danger to animal health in Britain. It would also have to be :,;itis ed that methods of " % nd slai. up t" standards require WebVi % ., made in reply to a question by a Conservative Member who asked whether n vet bean completed with W* bH mutton Britain, teafcr, His Razor Tames' Them I Buv Bri,i Twcnly years ago you could have |CM la Mai.ltn's Lane .nul COldd have got a haircut for ei^rr. MBit ITOIH I I side barber. TttM Qrlfltth. Today Fix/, charge! one shilling and he cuts behind the Advocate at the corner of Mc Gresor In The Park Yesterday ANYONE walking through A shilling i* tan cutttng pi Will *MV to (MY 3li ometime* 3s % b-rliers get work. noL IH> mueli by their *kill. for *s Pitz tcld the Adveeale p Queen's Park yesterday wouta:**ro is not mud Uead how the pavemelll % h  s k II Of Hie wayside barber, along the main thoroughfare are, 0 Bridfotown who have all been crumblmR quickly, BOBM of the Jo ''"' bualnaai for many years. % Ko are in sreal need o( J**9 a "' aU hand. iili the repair and yesterday Ihe gutter fT *f ors Cul ,,lp y 8" "" were Uttered with paper  % % lhrv aro of rnendiy ditpoti, lul hon aiKl if. as Fit/ w.'ll tell you. In great contrast to this wei ,h *' H 1 1 Of cob." Of the gardens which were dean BndJ c ? ur ** F,[t tan t 10 *"!' "I* a f^n.he grass around the flower U-.i-""" K '""* "" % '' ,0 P'C that It in were well trimmed. The steel shed! lhc ne *"' was being cleaned. I Some of the wooden cribs ware] '""t Hair Fr Nolhinc UM hhc-i I There was a phward pinned Upl fd/ lias bean ;i haJreuttei ItOW Mitside the  B arknouae which rai Tree V* Centi % % :i he used to he few ladies who were msid,the ''."'V':"' KoBd h< 'uld rut ni.tdim; handling the naai % irranginK the boxes of cotton sroo) vere navuu. -i auii Kawkei ked wRt akes. fruits and sweets were seen ere in the park. Men pparently unemployedUsed iround on the partly rotten cribs .aiting for etnathing to turn up At the other end of the park nea; the Oovei I very laric heap of rotten leaves which seem'.l t.. Ii;tv ( been dc% .une. The artificial lake was empty nnd here and there at the boNon ere Rreen patches of moss. Meal Negotiations Hits Overloaded Vincent Brandford of St. John was found guilty ye-Icrday of overloading the motor bus J-27? on Fair Field Itoad on December 20. His Worship Mr II A Talma before whom the case v ordered Brandford to pay n fine of 15/and I costs in 28 days or in default one month's Imprisonment with hard labour not. Mr. Barrow i.it hsaw no reason % NUld D0< be granted i in w.i. not what ha HPeWld lerni pew n. Capt. Gran* rested the point that If I ,, are granted a substantial nount should be i Mr. Talma told than iii^i tha Offence was a KtiOUl and rare id he Mi within I that if the person to whi threats were made was anxious about his safety then he saw no iced for bail. FAULTY BSAKFS Afler pleading guilty of driving motor car M-2?4 with InefBcieni brakes on Waterford Road. Mac Donald Garner of Jackman. St. Michael was fined £3 to be paid by mqnthly instalments or in default two months'imp< by His Worship Mr. H. A. Talma yesterday. The offence was committed on December 22 and the case was brought by the Police as a result of an accident on Waterford Road. Court For Divorce And Matrimonial Causes In the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causi Honour the Acting Chief JudtfS Mr. J. W. B Chcnery. pronounced decree absolute In the suit F. w ner) and D. M K. Storey (Respondent J There was nd order as to costs. Petitioner was repr* % % Mr JS B Dear insMessrs Hutchlnson & Banfleld contract are si an advai John Mc Wen, Australli % id today, Tu n deadlock In iiegotlatloni foi 1 WO, lamb and mutton under existing longtertn coMracti L Pi Od Ministry Oflicials rrtee in Australia In too odjust% They wpuld examine Australia's I i.asonably emcient production" because that basis of pnee review formula Mc Wen said. Reuter. Cook With Newspaper WASHINGTON wives have a few ln1 n to the problems of ceotdnj withoul electricity, gas or firewood in a national or local emergency. Some of their helpful hints. gathered during the process of making the best of bad condition! % outposts, are included the New Jango (JUNIOR ARafY NAVY QUn-D ORGANIZATION) cookbook. When deprived of electricily. pas and firewood, they recommend Bveral sheets of newspaper' be gathered. The newspapers should be opened and cut into strip.': or ns,.,| H lo best suit the need. The papers ought to be rolled piece then. Before reaching the end of the roll, ncnrdJng to the service wives. mother piece of newspaper should I-. add) B. They recommend that you then continue rolling tightly until you have a tight, thick roll. This c tied with a string nnd clipped Into a quantity of paraffin. An alternative is to melt candles onto the roll until it is thoroughly When rolled, the m | . should fit a num with Ihe lid removed. The roll should bg inserted in the can and atrnin saturated with pai They tlu n r.commend that a number two-and-a-half sire can *w minel ured on the side i* tha lid with :i can opener snd another hole be punched into the te side at the bottom The small can is lo be pU*vd beneath UM I. rftr I aa and thi paraffin is to be lighted Tu. larger can serves as the stova This method of cooking was used earl Harbour altar the bombing in December, 19*1. The soryice wives also recommend that in case of a stoppage In electric current a i>eanut may bt used for Uhiminatioa, The |x>anut is to be pressed lnl- i s-.ft object, such us fruit, and the pointed end of the peanut n to he lighted with :. match. This to make an excellent mey cmdie. l .vs. % nothing Culling achool ho-s' hair was by \v\y of pit At the time when Fitz used to On the boys' fa oner bays \. ii W I and tame him for the whi:e, he said. n! ii I in-In Aniorit'ii LONDON American antique dealer Frederick P Victoria ssid that Britain i-. running dry of old treasures. Victoria had been tounnR Europe for over a month and found it difileult to find anything ccittng. t.-ris: are hard to find in Englind and France. Somehow UM w*.rld i* running dry. Dealers BBsM t.i America if they want to buy rsfaasai antiques l "ew back to the United States with a few priceless treasures, any wayincluding Marie Antoinette's stepehair, a Louis XV I and two rare Nubian dolli made entirely of tiny sheila, INS. New Loveliness For You aa PAL.M0LIVE SOAP Moeai rhis V, Simple Bi-auty Plan vw.i. saacaHM sa> laaasai s.. P sii-, hi. umiiudi) ha iaari *" 1 hi. IniulnS m..-j(t lu. .kin Milk l-SfSSl l-.i H.ns ,*..|' GOES UP JUSTTHE SAME LONDON. Nationalized road transport in Britain will cost 11) i*-i cant luore from January 29 d ll.uil.ide Executive said tha Increaas lo general haulego nnd parcels ratal was nece*. % % % % raaani heavy in costs, particularly I n^ % igta and nat I This l* the second increase since the Industry was taken Ovei in February 148. Haulage ;.nd parcels rater, went up by 71 ; ar ml i 19 t up by 7 -I.NH. TltUMAN AND PLEVEN AGREE RECTOR OF ST. JOHN Rev. A K. Simmons. Rector of St. Lucy, has been appointed : S-. .1, n, This wai 1 at a meeting of the Board or Aprointmenl held in the lobby f-f the House of Assembly yesterday at 12.30 p.m. 0 I % % I %  I i: is pre iietad thai between the United states and France announced by Truman and Pleven will neatly Infl rbntgJI policy of all North i powera. In more formal times they would i fug % da illiari % The : '% i .if'.i-i" UK Two -Duv Conference batwcei, the President and the French Minister goes far beyond i.-lions and brood!v word ed statements of common objec i rtves uniBlly made aftai Men t;.!ks Many diplomats her.bestoved it gives n clearer pletUTO of One : | uilenttons of the tWO statesmen, than etther had pvan ontha % uilnk Franca ippear* to !" % anuniuu] % type Ot tnershlp with tha United States, hitherto reserved to English speeJtlnf coutrti lei It Is noted that the communique .ontolns no hint of dis.i ,ver Far Kactcrn policy like th1 month between President Truman nd British Prime MinisU Vth % Reuter Miners Defy Government SYDNEY, Jan. 31, The Australian Mlnw I lunell dc Lo defy Uie rtnvernment": strike ban and hold toppoges one day per week in th' coal mines. This step which follows similar deci ion by miners at mast la a protect against eonditioru a tta ched to the recent paj ward. The miners are liable to si* months imprisonment or £100 fine for ignoring the ban. The Council also decided lo see support for miners in cities A coal industry tribunal had decided to makg 'he wage Increases of up to two A pounds sterling conditioner on the mid ra' working 10 lull days per fortnight. The Government h.i threatened ti use troops if miner* % than iso.ooo w already idle in Sydney i acute coal shortages and % 'are part of th" mounting bidusb i i Railwayman, dissatisfied with wage rates have placed a ban on overiime and doeke/ are due to begin a similar ban ~'n February 2.  druter. The above equipi T m .!>. Mr n MMtlei HMM rr !" ti  % vim lhal h* could ec lha Hi ltd t * IxruM borrr bv ihe Utility rompnl* oiiuld be a fi^iil burd*n on th cempanw-% Th,. iwuM BSts rcd, on lh % fi-i..r-j r as 8VIU*BBUB>"  iimaiiai 5 Rralrf rrII:M ninqulries cordially invileil lor ihe supply of ihe following VI II.II. IV 11 rvl. Illl SI I Will I I THAI TOIIS (Sliil Vi li.. Is ..Isi. ... ..il.il.li !' % % % > % % % Kli) I.IIASS II ITKIIS .1 A lit, >I\M III SI'lll \IH IIS SHIP III I L\ I U\ IIAKIS H:KU >III IS 'MIIIII/IM. Illlll IS i Sdaai Fcveite !IUI aPUSKING IIITH "iciii IT: HUNG IS THE Mil. UftCTIVi WAT 10 KELP STOP CJOIH DECAY WITH CPIGAT! UHTAI CREAA 25c 45c 75c j FRESH SUPPLY OF \ PURINA HEN CHOW I (SCRATCH GRAIN) |H. JASON JONES & CO., LTD. -outmrnm ATIJkSTlt AT LAST!! You can rid your tables and Safes of ANTS frith l)i. NEDDS ANT TAPE EiTdtivLIan to UM* Safe. Just Tie It on. I U.t.nu.lde at: BOOKERS (BDOS) |i|;l(, STORES LTD. Broad Street, and ALPHA IMIAIIMACY. Mailings. t t.oint suohi\ | WIIIII rot^ r.i.v FRESH AIIIMV \l..s AT WEATHERHEADS EVERY BITE A DELIGHT Pry's 'll.uel Nut" Choc's: 2/-, 3/ and $1.79 Box I pi i l-lb Tin. Fl % R in..-1 Choi 'i 94c. and SI 69 Box Cndhurv's "Red Ro lWr and $180 lUix PR\ s "Seorened AJmonda" 2/Box $2 02 |..M |-lb. Tin Cadbury's "Milk Tray" Hoc. and si 4K im Cadbury'i Rasa Cho 90c and SI AH tin Cadbura i Choc B 5/and 5 S tin Meltls Coffee Choc-: Mini I r> um *i U boa ', % li, % % A-' il. $1.19 and $2.12 hox BuKM Manic Choc: $4.0 hox Salted Peanuts 0 4c. tin Jacob's Cream Crackers 6/tin Jacobs "Selected" Biscuits $2.0(1 tin Jacob's "Asst. Creams" Biscuits $1.51 tin Jacob% Family Asst." Biscuit* $1.47 tin Mcllin Favourite Candies $1.02 and $1 85 DOX Carr's "Club" Cheese" Bis% i' $1 00 tin i' % I. % i flOc. and 51 (fl Im S i> % TolTee BOe. TH< & $1 OJ Collard & Bnwsei "Nougat.' 34c. and 70c. Collard & Bowses "Butterscotch" lie, & 45c Ovaltlne Biwults . 43c. Box Blue Bird Toflee . 42c. lin MICE HIVrilFRHEAD LTD. of Broad KM § TURKISH and | EGYPTIAN I CIGARETTES 0 AMPULLA CKIAIU'TTKS No II  50's $ 1.61 £ .. No. M 20's 68 1 ,. No. 14  SO's $1.1(2 K No. 14  20's .66 9 ..  NO H*  BOH $1.45 5 ,.  No. 16  20's 60 | KNIGHTS DRUG STORES USE A RIPPINGILLES" BLUE-FLAME STOVE FOR EASY & CLEAN COOKING  A.S. BRYDEN & SONS (B IMIS) LTD. AGENTS. Be Comfortable While You Steep in Sea Inland Cotton Woven Cotton Py|aa*. -trlpcd dediiw. Bits :i to **. Gent-" white cotton Pyjama % Hast. Each. .8? Oents' purt Bilk Handkrrchltf*. whkW, blue, grey. Each $1.88 Whit* ViyelU Anklets with torn-or topn. Bite 10tl"i Suit_. .S8.48 Pair.. .$1.56 Boys' Ties with hand painted dtslgns, aimorted colours. Each.. .91* ELITE Long Bleeve Sport Shirt*. In ih.iden of crfiim. blue, green, xray. last, brown. % lass S to lsr| .-.55.92 Sea Inland Cotton Pyjamai i" srey. blue It cream. Bin* 38 to 44. Suit. _$15.96 94* .96? CAVE SHEPHERD & CO., LTD. 10, 11, 12 & 13 Broad Street

ESTABLISHED 18S5 Truman And Pleven Agree WASHINGTON, Jan. 31. PRESIDENT TRUMAN and the French Premier,! M. Pleven, in a joint statement today said that the United States and France would never neglect' any genuine opportunity to settle international problems by negotiation. "Discussions between the President and the Prime, Minister have shown again that no menace or, manoeuvre will succeed in breaking our fundamen l tal unity," the statement said. In Washington, in a 1.500 word communique issued seven hours after their final meeting ended, the loshdei they had agreed that aggression must not be re w arded, (N the menacr n f aggression ti pprased. Ti mo made Uv % % ...: % % plcli* agreement" U to n i -sistinj* aggression and assisting free nation-. In UM Phi East in their afforta to i.iitv and the assurance nf their indeper agreed thai every error: Hunt be exerted to bring about an honourable solution Both countries would support I aggres' ' THURSDAY, V*.'.. i^ PRItF FIVE fENTS i.oiurs Mki Lady A 8tor Protests LONDON. America u-born Lady % -oiufully < rilicised claims by Britain's Socialist Government that man women than ever. : % employed In industry. .Speaking at % meeting of Atonal Society for the lion of Cruelty to Children. Lady Astor said. "Where children are concerned I have no politics. I UM Government arc boasting about the number of women in industry. "It is horrifying that Woman with children should be in Industry. If we are :n a mess why don't the men work six days a week and give shorter hours 10 women" [hi Welfare State rocking. No Government has talked more about welfare fo, woman and children. 0 Government has let them down more. Ihe former Minister of Health, Aneurln Bevan, said ibne would be a revolution in this country unless more houses were built. Well, there nas been no revolution and there have been very few houses. But If the Tories had been In power for live years and DO houses were liuilt then might have been a revolution and Bevan would have tried to make it. "I hop theBritish have not lost their power of profor protesting against What is wrong made us great." INS. !. Truman pronvsed Pleven that American aid foe Pranch Union forces and the national dhe Associated Stataa of Indochina would if continued and increased quantities of war material would i" expedited, hurupe's Import'tnee WFDniNQ CAKE made for Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walcott by Mi-. Viola De Oason. a replies of the entc'iu-ert him to 12 veais t na; ria inment, was revoked He IS to nt|y ;,,( 1 American Mnjli Cuinmifslonei .i. M % l 1 of ihe ' In Europe % i the olhei ll. I % men are in Landsberg pen) several years not knowing whether the> would he executed. M.f|o> s-nd thai whii ii were final, were ....sc a In on the United S M Advlfory Hoard for War i In ihe ca i of Alfred Krupp Id "Even those guilty '.d participaUon in the i* i -I Jidegm. crime* have not i i i an dlgpoaed to lee) that Ion m thia Ungle case Imlnation agalntl % d by any i rum United Nations Troops Move Forward I n Korea tliat the Russian Emperor P*^(bulwarh Of world peace and of nd hin wife Catherine, pkecl Ihis tho | n dependea:e of free society ipetfklfauj beverage" "I wonder if a barrel of ale delivered at the Kremlin", aaid Wood, "might not do something to assuage the cold war**, -INS .. the % Full Scale Alliances Paul BanJdne n m en pace 5 (II \Kl.fS ( HRAN fHI\riSS I I l/AIH I II AMI l-AMII/. Cochran Dies At 79 LONDON, Jan. SI. Itritain's greatest showman. Sir : O chran, died hera lo79 after he was severely scalded in his bath last week. tie. launched hundreds of Ktars through his ions < arear noted every type of enUng, hnxUlng and 'hows became % % elected by hirn peraoa ehorui In IH2I he became bankrupt. Mo recovered, succeede I '34. a he waa 74 % ge with the muU "Bleu ihe Brtde" and II in 1048. : % the IheV Cochran beoaaw Chevajler 11 h Ix-gion of Honour in i960 for i n Introducing French art to the English stage. i roducrd 110 plays and I publica. -.! % Tiie Se, .. Hi Umost Forgotten,'' 1 Kruler " -7, ^ rnetTl added: "Where hate been substantially reduced, % MtO the result more of de-ponsibihtY and Othei extonuaUng i In umi lances brought tut mainly since ihe trials. 1 % alletuni IS wai crimuials iimtta 11 (urlsdli lion in ii 11 death seiit.i.i i % la i % f. unprlsorunent and upheld two i tenets rat Sehai% uard at Muehldorl Coniitratum (amp. near Dachau, bo asctracti i fold taeth rrom tha  had died r.om heatings he personally ad% 'l. and Hans S.Jm.nil. Adjutant at Burhenwald i iraUon Camp (or three years. During Schmidt MM) prisoners dud tech month because of camp conditions and ueltles inflicted on them by the Rruler Nevada Atom Tests Will Be Secret WA.MliN, rON, J.tii 31 Oordon Dew -non said hera thai all Inl etn it tha Navad tone will be withhi l,i to Slop Ruaaiem* finding out aboir. Dean used the U i", bosab N in uiening to the blast: two of which were set off la* % % but late, ta ICUy what he n "They are .ssennalu mental nuclear deton.a told a news eonferenre adding thai this deacrlpUoi aa curnbeav some but necessary to give the correct idea. IHera has been speculation that l.i blasts are small scale atomic aicploalons whkh mas ilnd mill' in m such weapons as rdded missiles. Dean said U  O % % would not ccimii.eiit on any such speculation. Neither would ft announce future explosions in advance DM tell anvthinic about them after warda the Chairman sau We do not want Russian obl lllclal or unontclol, ot| And we do nol w.ot Dte nature ^i v e leati or th ucce or lack of i act BM known to tinRussians.'"Reuter TOKYO, Jan. 31. UNITED NATIONS forces intensified their ad vance along the central and western fronts at dawn today. Troops sweeping forward on the central front had so far met no resistance. Vicious hand to hand fighting and artillery duels kept the advance along the 40 mile western front at a steady rate as troops struck tho main Commu His' lines of resistance north of Suwon. Canada Asks For Workers Korea Off V.N. Council Agenda I,AKK SUCCESS, Jan II The Security Council iiti.ui imousiy decided todaj to >'t the K' Ironi agenda. llrllain proposed the delet Tha Soviet Union q u I c k 1 j agreed and all eleven men held up their hands when h % i called for tha Quevedo ol tt Ltetl i i am i:' % ulthat lt i lu*; mimity." Britain took this action brraiise the Ceneral AsM'ndd. ,,,,, % racornrnendauot quaatlon being deali with i>v n Security COUnell. The deletioi if the Korean quaatlon born  Councll'a agenda would allow lha A % amblj to retltV tin R p.* < % < h\ I I'lditti :il (' mniiittee i inmuilis'. China as aiutrcs&or. sn Oladwyn Jabb, Britain told the Council it might in argued that the Council In feel I'ait not i ( Its funein respect to the K roan htaua because of lha Sovlel veto The forma] removal of tiniteir from tinagenda would n mi 11 techm Oladwyn added that the thin action m BrltaJn'a view would nol Invalidate in any wa> i Hot already token on Korea by tin Council, nor WOUM M prevent tio Council rrom taking up the mattei igaln it H dsa lde| lo do a bg imiiie proi adursl \ ola Si'iiivon Thampkun of t h. Sc.viet t' ii i on i. i'. i % % iv been put or the council's agenda In an Illegal lbwoulc vote therefore in faVOUl M lit diletiMii After a unaniinout I mad artlh out flxinn a data :or it* m InnReutrr India Iti-fust's Soul On U.NCommittee IndiNBW DSLHI, Jan 31. would not accept a seal t. tha Good ODloea Comrolttaa % Nntions' % solution brandlR % i, % today Reportsfrom Hi | ia|d that the Gesienl rullah Enl axiom thai tndl Su Isenegal Rau should norvi tn .i Authoritative Indian quarters in New Delhi deecrlbed lha I HI favour of tha 'i as an "unfortun % % % % i i impalrltia negntlated Battlement of tha Kon > % rn problems. India a t-'-i ngainn the resolution.Rruler. Eight Kitted in Belfast I'.KI.KAST. Jgn, 31. Al aaal end,! men were k I ad I mgway leading Iron whaling factory ship Ju4ii I'rron .oil.,p.,i sjad hurlc them on to the , wni nnd occu' urgent!) needed .ire ant-' draughtamei % % | workers, pl| metal workers. textile workers ami wood workers The suet % i % i.. ,i i  % % i possession of a minimum of i.io Appiicuit.-. must slao sign an undertaking to repa Qovenunent al tha i ate of not less than 510 | i: :i oiid i % month until tinlo.m h. ( been pud otr I at a tune hen Immigration titcures nave en faUln Prom iB4fl i Cai D i'-i Itii h n Igranta. the figure §pped to (list under 7.000 in the tnonthi i i % % % % K centri s % iy*a pounding by tl % \ : % ivn of Kosong. import. % east coast IS mileM.uth of thj 38th parallel. I % % i>f warships and lo el n H Mlteutnr! the world's Urgaat % % % aaaeujl  % % % i % Allied Bghters had out I % 1 .... wMUei % ItrllU-l lion llgures Coraperaoli > Auslrali.i i ,., Bui Canada ll not prepared to goto the aama lengtna as Ausettlera pen to any Euro11 i But we have on made available any free passages as tho Ausl i idi. II i Government h ivc 1 % % % lid Mr I. 0 Cummlng, Superintendenl or Canadian Im.' I!:, I'M in London to-day 'We feel t h.il f i . 'ittract ul > % anl lo avoid REALLY FRESH KAItAi 111 Fi% i. % ,,. r out', pi-i pound. The trt protected by govenimenl law which den la of meet trig day the cattle is slaughred. ic.r t Hustamante On Five Charges ilo.il. Off I '<>' pana.enl I [TON, Jan. 31. W \ % % % I % % i i loo on -i thai on *hli I nUy hound over In the um of J; 1.000 rial ha bt Spanish > % hi o.ii > 1Mb % i ipeech Buatamanta thy Park during the height recent Unreal "ii that r I % i i pllna of % omml lonei of Police Bkt Iton ise oT oifensive ealumnl I Peace on i the laltei charged 111 \ %  || li: oi i % I ted by D. B Ul -. Laedei ol the J C P. and Solicitor. 11 i i mi UiVOI \ li l ill NKW8 RJNO 3113 |t\V Oil NH.liT NOTICE Readers and Sidwcrlbers l<> 11** "ADVOCATE' Hill Newspaper in Herat surrounding districts axe asked lo note Dial we have appointed MR. s. A. DURANT our DisIrilmliii:'. Agent as from Siuul;o. I'.bniurv 13th, 1951. Please contact Mr. Dnrant, Horse Hill. Si. Joseph, who uill see after the deliver] of your Daih Paper. ADVOCATE CO.. I/I lh. Circiilulioii Dept.. Dial 2112.5.

PAGE 1

PACK TWO BARBADOS ADVOCATE THURSDAY, I I ItlEI ARK Ccudb Calling C iLYDE WALCOTT. ffM  and Spartan wicket-keeper batam,in. son of Mr. Prank Walcot*. il "C\ Black Rook was yesterday married < *-i Church Aahter. cldost daughter ol Mr, md Mrt Vaga Akhjbv of 'Plumgrovc" Christ Church. The bride prveanted beautiful picture in a dre*s ol while embroidered or*anza with a yoke of illusion net. Tln> Hi three-flounced skin that ended in n train Her head-dress waa % Juliet cap ct seed pearls and BM WON I fingertip veil of illusion net She cniried a bouquet of wh'U" roses uaith orchid* ll.taHwInail with seed pearls. Tin MHaM Barbara Ashhv and Ml I lH-atitilul attendant* of the bride. They wore dresses of jonquil yellow and blush lavender organza tcspectivcly. They carried bououeta of violets and orchids, and tiaras of flowers adorned their hlr. Mr Keith Waleott. Lntarcoaonial cricketer .md footballer, brother of the bridegroom was bestman. Messrs. IterrOdle. Cliflord Sklnntr. Frank and Cecil Clarke were the ushers. The Reverend Hugh Payne cfflcialed. The bridegroom's cake was one of the DMM original fern in years. It was made to represent tho. Criekc. Held at Lord's where Clyde Wdlcctt muac 168 not out in the Second England-West Indies Test at Lord'* last year. The bride's cake was in the shape of two hearts pierced by n Cupid's bow. These wire the creation of Miss V. Oe Cazon who won the first DfffM ui the Icing Division with ihe Ingenious copy of a hat .it last year's Agricultural Industrial Exhibition. The honeymoon is being spent at Bath.'heha Mr. and Mrs Waleott leave for England next month Hunting Patterns H if EMBERS of the Barbado* Dramatic Club playing in "AUuxuar Has Been Arranged," *o be staged 11 the F.mplre Theatre towards the middle of next month are busy hunting for jjatterns ol the dresses of notable people in past history, such a Mary Queen of Scots. Henry ,f Navarre, and Kuthertne of Russia The play, although modem and AMHand Mrs IrvUfl K In modern costume for the most ITl. arrived on tin I < ** of Mr. Ross McKenzic, T.C.A., l>art. gives a flash back to the yesterday from Can-i< arrived Iron Canada It s a long time since a costume n, v B .* % T C A nilot Their yesterday by T.C.A. They will stav play has been performed locally hn 1  and I understand every detail is being studied even down to the ctrrect wigs. Women Don't Give A Hang LONDON British males complained today thiit British women were becoming "ruder, more sarcastic and more aggressive than ever before." Tli.mild-mannered, slow-moving Englishman. who likes to think he is lord of the manor, Is Judy Garland's Story By Judy Garland As Told To Michael Drury AQI'ATIcrLVH CINEMA (M.mb.n Only] :i MKI1IIT" Because of my photoaraphK Mil % I abed Taylor ', S^-HS^ VZ&rVdt&CK. me do tha, .* seen. SW K UTteKTj. 1. WomVwere ruie "d r£^e J. "a*"* " """" "-* enough before the meat ration but now thw.... u> % drtih. fi52SvjTE\irraa m". rr s" .is? arir'JS in. times 1 couldn't believe ihy Some months later I heard & rro^eU'Vh-cn 1 ? Jft JTS "Se"^.." *5L. '" %  i r ^ i ^e^,: 0 dre.S h ul h.d' d h.T --5iji^ir^ !"  "^1 me into his office and tolo Mervyn Leroy was going to The Wizard of O*" and I cried all ever my make-up. wanted me U> play Dorothy. and she almost had to push mo n wa my first big break. I got back on that set. But then on a pe C ,al Academy Award for that thje first try, it went off smootn n i mi anu i wheeled my mother as cream. into letting me wear long w, '' c gloves to the reception, and a lltt PLAI£i\ Thralre Bridgetown (DiAl 2310) l MY WILD IRISH ROSE" % - ! 1 P iiuTVDOB nassHi ft BTHAann unrojr riUDAV III t*.M. lOttlii (t TI1F M \|.|l--t \; ITnM Dm .. -i' 1 COVIS IO t.i  -I' 11 I Suddenly 1 knew whV hc^had gg^Jgj,'^ ,ll have I .il .lorn. 1 s.w th.tLf w r ; er oln, to be_y £* % "'' ' ,r w i.i anted They . d w | , of myM_and^uc f ^^ ..^^ ^ ^ m% ..^ gc m liatever character I white and t*iulMR. AND MRS. CLYDE WALCOTT T.C.A. Pilot ind Mn Family Reunion IIS JOYCE McKENZlE. w SEW SKT^^SS ^^^"mXrp'icrre^ tzr^ *tiT2A*t ES one: N lost U my U.ent. me Mervy, cut they want. I just can't ympathiie with them any more." Department store detective Ralph Curry is thankful his shop':. January tales are over. % Never have I seen such disgraceful scenes," hje claimed. "Why the women went wild. punhing. shoving; grabbing and at ] times what language! Th matched hats out of each olhe. ^naievr ti hands, held Uigs-of war over . a ving. 'o"' dro ** tan and i BsmrajtaiJ inorc Utw vine*) % > dnvt tte wiww eaat rant a lew squabbling PO-called lacile-,".  1(l in h( erul I was more please. Other girls *ettiir W ^ Salaarnan Edwanl Foole charged uilh -Meet Me In St. Louis' ning dress 'or proms. "' m ^. that men couldn't walk Use streets lh an with anything else I had so I'd look right when I put :m> rf London anymore without iMV up till that time feet in the wet cement at c.rju"bems assaulted by umbre)|.  ,.  mans Chinese Theatre high heels shopping bags or big I was to receive still anotnei people more astute than I hate parcels * % % lpMon )n QeUnf lW)> or lhreP vpars ^ JJ undcrsland th. "Women don't seem to give a ;jtar that when 1 went to see aftl p between movie rtars a hang trapse dayThey just charge The Glass Menagerie on BrowAn actress not only holds a ceralong without looking what they way. To be WTO I'dJy+j gf Um ,ob but in a sense |h are doing or where they are going, I wrote ahead for them oeiore i Job; |h(f ftnB Hke h ^ r  And the best you get alter being left the coast. her : obi lf hal In9 kes sense. crtcke.1 over the shins with an When I got to Njy T* !" y\\ never forget the first time 1 umbrella is a sharp 'sorry' Most picked up the tickets .M the uoj mob of ^ women don't say a word but jus rfflee 1 ttle note '^"^""^ Mickey ind I wont to New York look daggers a. you a. if ,t is all T*>ior £ P^ *J.  * : for Uie opcnlni[ of an A^. n...d, ^i^clor Rupert Kent: "l-adies ^V^'to^ed and m jreul ladiea any more except. It prised, because wed never EIJ'M^SSS" SHS '''t'^^'r-S actor, buck ^K^J3 women can be delightfully charmstage Is unaatJsfactory. They re focal point mgand become rude, saucy, illtired and h igrv. % tempered females". l.N.d. PLAZA Theatre OISTIN {DIAL 8404) .ith too i B.B.C. Radio Programme Montreal Cuatoms Official for a few days at an hotel before moving into their new home, Atlantic View", Enterprise Boiil, Chrht Church. Le Misanthrope ^HE montlily meeting of 1*Circle Prancaise will tako ni bad< A RRIVING from Cmada yesterday on Ihe T.C.A. Spe. lal Flight was Mr. Frank J QullW who Is Chief Appraiser o( custom* in Hamilton. Ontario. He is here Firtt VUit M BS. £ SOPER it South Hull PQ was met at Seawell place at the British Council quarters. Wakefiold. at 8 IS lor about six weeks and U a guest day b "" In n *, t ^' tonight K i. propoaed to read at the Hotel Roval. }* v !" * h l8 ^ nd, B a Le HlaanUu-ovV. P U%y i.v holiday In Barbado.. Mrs Soper Moliere, and those having copies Not Even Carnival idown for a month a n d is staying asked to bring them along. m "c ( -7nr ?. ?, I, 1 % < ""' Mur1 ^ ? She ca me a*;i5S CAROL MAl.H who , 1)n )hr T C A Special flight was in Barbados In DecemThis is her llrst iit to Barbados. tmasDAv. rtMiAiv i IMI s.js m (li..rall. Sswaklitg. 1 45 a tu.lrf.er*Choice, t am. Ijii.a and i"ro.k. % so a m Bdwaid i r.r^ir, I.U . Analfila. It 1% t> IK pin ljhi Orchi-Mial Muu (4S p m. Proti tiT-iin* Parada. 1 p" Tr.a Nawa, T.W pjn Nawa Analyal 1 i p m. Wa as though the realise almost with .uu. tMHWM that 1, too. have feaUnfl (To-morro: Judy's marrlagra: she start* psychoanalylieal treatments in effort l he better iie and ni-'tin. -. I.AIETY [THE GARDEN) ST. JAMES utrrc SM LAKCENV WC VMM,-; PCM i HI l u.l t % KOStrANNA MeCOV MARSHAL OF MF.SA CtTV % n\ in, in 1DUKI ,'.;'.',.','.',',',*, % GLOBE 1<> I1AV 4 30 a. 8.S0 LAST SHOWING  Wfa I Mt.Xii I/.OA///7. WHOM: srniAL OPLNINO FKHtAY !nd I *. 8 30 last* OAKLAND A Oene KELLY h, SVMMEM STOCK Plas) LOCAL TALLNT at 8 30 Cloaa Dm. ii I understand that the laat Ing of the Circle was M ,: success, though a few of the mem2? b> ..is use IIJU ii. a u.u ht. 11 m Radio Nevl. IU nit, SIT John Mar(iH'a l-i" Jiutmr 8 t-1 p.m. CompoMr or lha Waak. t p m. Spacial Dtapntch, S.ll p m Ha.a a On. % 44 p m Do Your PUmt-mbai. lb p.m. Tha N. ISIS p m. from " % Stlltonal*, 10 IS pm Taka II liom II.nIC4I pm MoraMcClaran Talkinl II pm The Mum of Sid Phillip* and l.ia Band fin hoi Ida v, bers were found furtivelv versing in English. En Route to England A FTER spending Canadian Solicitor JAMES M FORGIE. o Solicitor of Pembroke, arrived from Canada JifLi' ffiHl ^SS* 1 niKl1 v ^>f"-y I'V T.C.A. to spend two M RS. ho couldn't resist the opportunity of roining down again tvn the knowlclge ol Carnival In Trim\4" dad eculdll'l tempt In i t.. ny-pu.*s 1V1 S^.. BarUidi l SI i terttav Ontario M T.C.A.  "--'weeks' She holiday in Grenada with their staving uncle Mr. George Joseph, a merCarol works with T C.A. chant of St. Georges, the Misjes Montreal. ray and Peggy Joaaph raturad to m *> EngUuui on Monday evening by FOf Carnival (he Fremh u Colomble They Hew over lo Barbados \f"-'"'I Mrs. Julian At\ from Grenada bj IIWIA, i loin iT and Ihei the boat and during .heir short for Trinidad o. .. visit, were staying at the Hota* by B.W.I.A. to spend C| "' re or a month's holiday, Royal. In Trinidad. staying nt the Abbeville Guest Mr. At well is with Dear's House, then she plans to visit Summer Retort Garage here Grenada and Tobago, ,. Mis. Snyder was in Barbados fcflU II. BEVERLEY ROBINSON To Study Law In March last year. 1TJ. who lives nt St. Andrews-by.. % % the-Sea. a summer resort in New A RRIVINC in Barbados on T.V. Dancer Brunswick arrived by the T.C.A. -* asbslday .veii.nu BJ tha TN Kaleidoscope' last week Speci.ii from Canuda yesterday. Colomble from Pi I .n-viirt fai England Bond and Stock Broker, E. BiasMiigU.n ... .he s r. \: i >  >d SJIW tor the thud lime Wcsl Imli.-i Rupert and the Sketch Book-24 Mi companled by his wife and they | lag at Sam Lord's. Wub Herr Laat Year 1 HS. CI-1VK SNYHKII whose home is in Kitchener. Ontario lOchaai I.I. "''"I % *'" % Canada by the ,. T.C A. Special yesterday. She Pr.u." on in ihe diriction thi: Roul'.c hit gont. Rupcir rrschti inothct aide road. "Now I don't know which w* r lo go." he mur% nun. Then ht brighltni a he .pin i till figurr in the nJ< load. ,r Thn'i anolher Dolictmin." he  '.-. *> % %  would never go near a alter what hu happened. She muu hive kept airaight on." And i" spue of iae ram he runs ahead. Tt road bend, and gradual! (he hoUMt get feaer and tht tow:i (oim IO an end. Thia il awfV. -vk tomaone te help." he thinka. He and is here for u month's holiday, the Caribbean Commlssmon, She ll dancer Boscoe Hold. It s pretty cold In Canada now and now on her way i i f., ;.,t Deenniui Wnlter-EIlis. doing their he prefers the summer resort .if Kingdom where aha hopag in usual sketch "These are tha the Weet Indies. study law, dan BY THE WAY  . Ijp Hoarhviimlur YOU'VE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE IT ON THE SCREEN BEFORE . IT'S FASTER THAN SOUND! IT'S GOT I \ I K V I HIM. : THRILLH . ADVENTI'RE . ROMANCE IH'I.MM. io-\nmnm\ ,l,i,I.,,,, J..IO ami II..IO p.m. HfS A TtST laf MJeTHJMX mm A ass*-any the DM T IE President of th< Society, of which founder member (In around Boot through the Influence of an aunt who Invented flypaper overcoats for cows), h; complained that science has invented so many queer languages Novcr j d ^ WMU can no lunger Lindartftand one onother. ; or tin Tuvniv Ywir* of I /mmi A VOICE Hnrt/s of I* .'KHI furl A SCIENTIST, TP^attffTlg^ Royal bod) i belter. wishing to roan anxious world, uttficd (without a smile) this it powai monumental sentence: "The Uatcal crlUc. scale of ntomic atljick necessary A very to destroy the whole surface of loud voice." It la said that, when the globe Is much larger than singing Falcnn.i in "Uinaldo." people realise." Good! Thii will add lo the Ruiliguz/i blew a unull child out gaiety of nations, and encourage ol the front row of ihe stalb .is #1 / ussi/lar the lighter-hearted among them easily as you or I would blow out m ^^ m to babble without resiraint. At I candle And Angvlique -T^HF report published by the the Wanscote Experimental StuAdinoide. taking tha part of MorColonial Office the other day .\lso the Short: "SO YOU WANT TO BE IN PICTURES" turn Ui.v tell the story of a gana In the same opera, uttered dealing with the Island of St. professor who said mulvlcules. a shout ("a cry." say* the muatcal Helena recalled In mv mind a when he meant bulvicules The critic) which wh^ked Hie bow eWlOUl fact. When Napoleon inlarpreter translated the wrong out of Ihe hand ol the llrst fiddle was a schoolboy he kept % noteword, and a Portuguese colleague ("violin" says the mmic.il critic), book in which he Jotted dowe found he had made a strong soluand made the conductor's whifpoints from his studies. There Uon of oxohvdrodimetholvxtrol ker.s tremble like those of the w< an entry in the section dein^lead of chlorophosphocortobiioold sailor at Weymouth when the voted to geography. Slv Jivlene, lene As al' four words were impudent little boys' ask him lo priUe He . Those four words. invented by I^ilp o! I^lpiig. nosay "flfty-flvc." BM no more. RAYWDaO MASSEY IHCVAW WHOKF gnjMR HEISLH Plus Latest "WORLD NEWS" (Presented h> Ws.-ner Pathe News) #*#-1 ikf 1 #Yf e-'f-f ##'# BRIDGETOWSDial2310 Wise Buys BARGAINS today. Prices will rise. So don't delay Flowered CRETONNE at EVANS & WH.TFIELDS DIAL 4606 DIAL 4220 LINENS dept. lines Yd 27' Print CRF.TONNE 64(1 36' CHEESE CLOTH 42* 56'STRIPF. TICK 1.19 F30\1['.STIC 38 1 & iSt l>illow 2" Pillow-cases94? f. 97* ACT QUICKLY!! THEY'RE MOVING FAST!! A Small Shipment of AGRICULTURAL FORKS O.M.Y $4.70 EACal THE BARBADOS CO-OPI IIA I ivi: Mil BO\ I Al TORI LTD. Has-dsrarr and lrwai,ni'r< Drp.rtm.nt T.lrphonr No !39 CROSSWORD Ii H j 'A 1 E | |i I 5 >6 F *t w J ^-. Acraaa 1 and 6 Down. Gad I Mere nothing ia ivn.il uvu goi Irom liim. \.i. J. S. flf 7. Inlcnttou. (7) I. swallowed Iu a dais bos. (3) 'i, Ovui. IS) t. SoiiirboHya aon. 131 I'atUT irom the bsmge, (3) Nymph. I3i s re hn*e oon^ it jcu mutt. (4) 1. You ara looking at II. (a) Kapa In return. <4I gitan teen la a u-eche. (8) Tuna, ill I MI to drlnK it. (i 2<>. Letter symbol to show the lUC. car. (V) l 2. Tula will ci>var nprtv il. Hnunda. ol eouraa. (Ii I Obviously a inoat. (Si 6. One who ahoulti succeed, ti) 0 BM 1 Acroaa. % ; Mufflcirni r.ipe for in artist. 17) 8 ramlllar mn. (Si II. Tin.* blue ij tL-mr'ilv. 19) 10. uBiruaivelr l(,uu. i7. IB IC0.111--I. (4) IVYou'll and tnia naauut resort in Ihla part ol Europe. (3), 20. It', annum.j (4l 31. Bspressm anguat. ni 23. Clllldlali tnauu W Una ptLlvlilrv a grant canal. (S) 29. Courli-ty illle, (3) fa. W 1. uitf.. 5 a' 1^ DM; 17 Earn Teil.in; 14 Rxu; IP. OBSERVE that different brands of Bay Rum come, and they go, but BORNN'S BAY RUM will go on forever WHY? QUALITY Thais Why IS O W A I, // INK / TO IIAV at 4 Only Hr-1 M.I. INDIAN HIM IO III SHOWS IN rlAXBADOS HA ta,J>tiat f~\ |> p ; ""/ P^^*aaaaBBBBi I'll. House, Haln TO-NHilIT -I 8.30 Only M-G-M Bl| Dmihli. WILLIAMS and IV'ci LAWFORD m "O.v i.v isr i v#* II it II YOV llls/lV VarVII YORK Starnni; Johnnv WEISSMI'l.I.h R id Maureen OSULLAVAN EMPIRE OLYMPIC LAST TWO SHOWS TO l> \V 1.*:, and H .1(1 20th Century Fox Presents LAST TWO SHOWS TODAY % !.:;" and 8 15 --##.#. QET ttV" Color by Technicolor Starring June HAVER % % LUan LUNU1GAN With Gloria Lie HAVKN und Dennis DAY Universal Smashing Double Barry FITZ GERALD in "NAKED CITY" now LAST TWO SHOWS TO DAT 4.45 und K 15 f Columbia Serial TEXGmAXGEm rrlna Hobert KELLARU l*ggy STEWART With Buz/ HENRY & Smith BALLJSW AND "PIRATES OF MONTEREY" Starring Rod CAMERON & Maria MONTEZ CUTLERY and PLATED WARE FLAVOUR For Mellow Smoothness anil distinctive flavour. There la no rum that com pares with . s & s mm & SAMPSON LTD. Ilr.dqu.rtrr. for IV.t Rum. Small Canteens of 6 Knives Fork, and Spoons Stainless Sleel Carver Sets Sets ol Spoons Cake Forks Cake Baskets ,' also LARGE THERMOS FLASKS PLANTATIONS LTD.